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Wi-Fi shines through cloudy iPhone data packages

Wi-Fi shines through cloudy iPhone data packages

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 21 Jul 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

While your monthly 400 MB allotment of 3G connectivity could get burned up pretty quickly, the iPhone's Wi-Fi connectivity offers a silver lining for the data-hungry

Calculating which Rogers data package you’ll need to comfortably (and affordably) operate your iPhone is a challenge. It’s not only adverse to our Internet surfing habits, but requires an endless string of addition, taking note of each click as well as the size of every page.

Rogers provides data usage estimates that suggest 400MB would allow up to 200,000 text e-mail messages or 3,100 Web pages or 1,360 photo attachments. These estimates point to an average 129K per Web page.

But determining an average Web page size depends on how you do the math and what sites you plan to see. According to Web performance and Internet marketing firm Website Optimization, the size of an average Web page in 2008 is over 312K, up from 93.7K in 2003. Web pages have more than tripled in size over the last years, says the site, and the number of objects has doubled, from 25.7 to 49.9.

Increased bandwidth speed is one reason Web sites are experiencing such growth and Web developers probably didn’t have future Canadian iPhone data packages in mind when creating them.

To determine the size of the Web pages you frequent, a free Web page analysis tool is available from Website Optimization. Type any URL in the field, click a button and a full page of statistics, including page size, will result.

Based on Web Page Analyzer’s calculations, visiting Yahoo.ca requires about 253K while Yahoo.com came up at 5K. Google search results, whether Canadian- or US-based, average between 6 and 21K. Other popular sites include: Wikipedia.org (139K), Facebook (172K), eBay.ca (300K), YouTube (302K), Amazon.ca (350K) and Canada.com (an astounding 1067K).

With the launch of the iPhone App Store, iPhone users have plenty of new ways to rack up their data charges. For example, Pandora now offers a free streaming Internet radio station. If you access this application on the 3G network, you’re looking at roughly 128 kbps. Three songs and ten minutes later, you’ve consumed about 76 MB of data.

Wi-Fi provides a silver lining. “If you’re on a limited data plan, you could certainly use Wi-Fi to augment your data consumption,” said Mark Tauschek, senior research analyst at Info-Tech Research Group.

One of the iPhone’s most coveted features, Wi-Fi provides faster data speeds, less battery drain and no data charges. Rogers won’t charge you any fees to use Wi-Fi on the iPhone and doesn’t need to grant you permission to access individual Wi-Fi networks.

If an available Wi-Fi network is detected, the iPhone will automatically default to it. When you move from a 3G to a Wi-Fi location, or vice versa, your data connection will automatically transfer too. As the iPhone doesn’t support voice calling over Wi-Fi, automatic network transfers apply to data, not calls.

The iPhone and iPhone 3G received official Wi-Fi certification from the Wi-Fi Alliance on June 16, which means the phones were tested in an independent lab and met pre-defined security requirements and interoperability with other Wi-Fi certified devices, explained marketing director Kelly Davis-Felner.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

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Comments (1)

teacher
by Cindy Vertin 12/31/2008 12:00:00 AMDo I have to have an active wifi connection to use FileMagnet? My iPhone isn't connecting to the wifi I have. Is there a way to obtain an active wifi connection? Do I have to go through my internet provider?
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