on 15-11-2012 23:04
on 15-11-2012 23:04
A couple of days ago Google launched its Music service in the UK, and it's absolutely fantastic. The service acts as a cloud for your music collection, allowing you to access your music from any web browser as well as giving you access directly from Android's built-in music player. Having tried this service for the past few days, I'm completely in love with it. What I'm not in love with is the amount of data it uses. Over the past 2 days of commuting 45 minutes each away, I've burnt through nearly 350MB. While music is cached after the first time of playing, rediscovering my music collection has come at the cost of using nearly all my data allowance in just 2 days.
Having looked at the O2 website, the largest bolt-on I can find for data is just 1GB, or about a week and a half of commuting. While I can appreciate that many users loading such a large amount of data can cause strain on the network, such caps will become increasingly restrictive on phone usage as more and more data-intensive apps become availabe - a criticism also levied against EE for their low data caps. This is seriously making me consider carefully whether it's worth abandoning O2 in favour of Three's all-you-can-eat data tarriff when my contract comes up for renewal next year, especially if 1GB is the upper limit on O2.
Which raises the question - would people be willing to put up with slower data speeds and more congestion if it meant that data limits were higher, possibly leaning towards an all-you-can-eat package? And would the rise of more data-intensive apps like Google Music cause more people to lean towards the higher data caps over higher speed?
on 17-11-2012 19:22
on 17-11-2012 19:22
on 18-11-2012 17:24
on 18-11-2012 17:24
Maybe we need a hotel wifi prices & location app!
on 18-11-2012 17:40
on 18-11-2012 17:40
All Marriott's are free for 24 hours then £5 per day....
@sheepdog wrote:Maybe we need a hotel wifi prices & location app!
on 18-11-2012 17:47
on 18-11-2012 17:47
on 18-11-2012 17:51
on 18-11-2012 17:51
Easy. Just flog ads into the app itself! Might be a fun project for myself when I get time to think about it properly just to try out mobile app building.
on 18-11-2012 17:53
on 18-11-2012 17:53
on 18-11-2012 18:06
on 18-11-2012 18:06
on 18-11-2012 18:12
on 18-11-2012 18:12
on 19-11-2012 10:47
on 19-11-2012 10:47
it can be youtube or facebook Apps i would ask alway login out of facebook so it can save your data or use wi-fi