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2007-02-19
, 20:27
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Posts: 2,869 |
Thanked: 1,784 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Po' Bo'. PA
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#12
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By developing and introducing the Nokia 770 and N800 ITs, Nokia gave the option of using Bluetooth and Wi-Fi to its Users. Using the Phone as ' tethered Bluetooth Modem ', was something that its User Community figured out ( because first of all, if all the phones could be used as tethered Bluetooth Modems then things would have been really easy.
Secondly, even before the advent of Nokia Internet Tablets, some of the Phone Service Providers were already blocking the use of the phones ( bonded to them ) as tethered Bluetooth Modems, by crippling the DUN.
T-Mobile, for example does not ' totally ' support the use of Bluetooth enabled phones as tethered Modems. Cingular charges extra to use the phones ( branded by them ) as tethered Bluetooth Modems.
Since both the Nokia ITs have Bluetooth and Wi-Fi ( and now even FM Radio ), I feel that the onus of the getting a phone that can be used properly with these Tablets is on the User.
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2007-02-19
, 21:40
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Posts: 152 |
Thanked: 6 times |
Joined on Dec 2006
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#13
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If I lived in the US, I'd most likely buy a SIM free phone of my choice which hasn't been crippled by any network provider.