Saturday, November 1, 2008

AT&T, Lenovo partner on cheaper 3G for notebooks

AT&T, Lenovo partner on cheaper 3G for notebooksCarrier AT&T and PC builder Lenovo say they have collaborated on a project meant to drive down the cost of 3G broadband on notebooks. Buyers of Lenovo notebooks in the ThinkPad T, X and SL series will get a free 30 days of AT&T's DataConnect service, if they sign up for a two-year contract; more critically, models with the necessary Ericsson module will not cost any more than a regular version, which the companies claim will save as much as $150 per computer. The arrangement is being targeted mainly at small- to medium-sized businesses.

Connecting a US notebook to a 3G network typically requires the purchase of an external USB or ExpressCard modem, as integrated cellular receivers are rare within North America. AT&T operates on an HSPA network, said to provide average download speeds between 700Kbps and 1.2Mbps, and uploads limited to a range between 500Kbps and 1.2Mbps. This is faster than EVDO networks on rival carriers, but slower than Sprint's Xohm WiMAX.



  • Madworld Update
  • Sony recalls 100,000 PC batteries
  • Lenovo netbook entry due before October?
  • Lenovo gives S10 netbook instant-on Linux mode
  • Ultra-wide notebooks at Dell, Apple, more?
  • No comments: