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T-Mobile calls it a day for WAP

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 11 June 2008 - 16:26 · 3 comments & 4189 views

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UK operator T-Mobile is disconnecting its CSD-WAP subscribers from July 9th, suggesting customers might like to switch to GPRS or something a little more 21st century, and disposing of pay-per-minute internet access. Circuit Switched Data (CSD) was how mobile phones accessed data services in the early days, or at least the technology that allowed them to try. Technically equivalent to a dial-up modem, it allows speeds of up to 9.6Kb/s, ideal for downloading the latest news and reviews from the Mobile Internet.

The first WAP phones only had CSD, and it was the 9.6Kb/sec speed that drove the creation of WAP itself: a desperate attempt to create a usable experience over such slow connections. But even the mono graphics and text-menu content was painfully slow to use, and starkly contrasted with TV advertising in the UK, from Genie Internet, promoting the Mobile Internet.

View: The full story @ The Reg

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#1 WelshBluebird on 11 Jun 2008 - 19:20
yay. About time. Now if they (and the other providers) can get 3G (or better) coverage nationwide, I'll be happy lol.
#2 thenonhacker on 12 Jun 2008 - 02:30
I never ever have used WAP. If I want Internets, I use computers.
#3 +mrbester on 12 Jun 2008 - 15:29
I'll take pay-per-minute over pay-per-byte any day. I've connected once on a pay-per-byte package and that was by accident when I first got the phone and pressed the wrong button. I'm not paying their exorbitant prices when I have broadband.

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