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Verizon 4G MiFi Obliterates Hotel WiFi

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On day two of my 14 day visit to Miami Beach, I realized that the hotel WiFi at the W Hotel was not going to work for me. Once again I was at a Starwood Hotel, which I love, except for the abysmal WiFi and WiFi policies. In this case, performance of WiFi in my room sucked and the cost was $15 / device / day. Upon connecting my computer and Amy’s computer, I realized I was paying $30 / day for shitty WiFi. Nope – that doesn’t work for me.

I tried my iPhone 3G tethering. AT&T service was as bad as the WiFi – I literally couldn’t get a consistent signal in the room. I wasn’t desperate yet, but I was definitely uncomfortable. Amy was annoyed, as in “Brad, why doesn’t this shitty technology work?” and all the Skype calls I had set up looked like they might be a bust.

I had my IT guy Ross overnight me a Verizon 4G MiFi. It arrived the morning of day three and I never looked back. I plugged the MiFi into the wall, pressed the On button, connected each device, and never thought about Internet access again for the remaining twelve days. When I went down to the pool, where nothing worked at all, including the hotel WiFi, I sat for hours with my MiFi happily connected. Performance was great – I didn’t even notice that I wasn’t on a 50MB/sec connection.

I only ran into one edge case that was annoyingly bizarre. The MiFi allows five devices to connect simultaneously. But guess what – the two of us had six devices. Two Macs, two iPads, and two iPhones. The first time we realized this after getting weird “can’t connect” errors we each burst out laughing – c’mon, six WiFi devices in one room between two people? However, when you step back and think about it, the idea that there might be 10, or 20, or 50 in a few years is not beyond the realm of possibility.

So – instead of paying Starwood $180 / day for shitty WiFi, I ended up paying Verizon whatever my monthly fee is for excellent MiFi. Verizon wins this time. Starwood – you keep bumming me out with your WiFi policy. I’m already paying a ridiculous premium for your high end hotel – why not toss in the WiFi like the Marriott does. Or, at least get it to work.

February 27th, 2012     Categories: Tech I Use     Tags: , , , ,
  • http://freepository.com John Minnihan

    The MiFi reached the pool from your room?  That isn’t clear.

    if yes, what’s the approx distance?

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      The MiFi is portable / battery powered. So when I went to the pool, I just brought it with me in my pocket.

      • http://freepository.com John Minnihan

        Yeah, I thought so.  I was confused by the statement “…plugged the MiFi into the wall..”

        When at the pool, did you open it up for others?  Curious abt this, as I’ve seen some folks do this at airports etc.

        • http://www.feld.com bfeld

          Yup – anyone who came and met with me got to use the MiFi. It wasn’t open to the general public since there are only five simultaneous connections and I was always using at least two or three of them.

          • http://www.justanentrepreneur.com Philip Sugar

            I have “saved” several people with mine.  Getting out a proposal, sending something to the boss, etc.

            If I didn’t have a personal policy of not taking compensation for favors (ruins the karma) I think I could have made enough money to offset the cost of the device.

      • http://startupnorth.ca Jevon

        Is that internet in your pocket? or are you just . . . 

  • Anonymous

    hope you had a great holiday and very much looking forward to the book!

    I live in a country that struggles with internet speeds. Africa as a continent needs to be connected and the more we stay unconnected the more we loose out on large amounts of commerce and technological innovation.

    Cellphones penetration in South Africa was very impressive but cellphone rates are one of the highest in the world.

    Data prices keep dropping drastically whereas phone calls remain extremely high. I am certain VOIP will in out in the end. People moving onto purely data packages here in Africa and then using skype or messaging to communicate eliminating the high cost of calls.

    And especially on wifi voice becomes free. The cellphone networks are just using the next few years to make money off calls before data wins.

  • DaveJ

    Why are you still on AT&T for your phone?

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Because I’m stubborn. Actually, Verizon on an iPhone isn’t much better. And I can’t seem to switch to Android – every time I try I end up back on the iPhone.

      • http://www.charliecrystle.com Charlie Crystle

        I’m switching in a week or so, likely to Spring though Verizon has the best android phones. Sucks there’s no Razr or ICS phone on Sprint. But the service is more reliable along the midatlantic corridor.

  • Anonymous

    Why don’t they just keep a basket of MiFi’s behind the counter for premium guests?

    When I check into an ITC in India they know to stock my minibar fridge with Diet Coke and the kind of beer I like.  That kind of personalization is not rocket science.-XC

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      No kidding. It totally baffles me.

  • http://www.janiskrums.com jkrums

    Why not stay at an apartment on South Beach.. there’s plenty of sites out there to get a great deal for a two week rental.

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      We thought about it but punted this time – just felt like staying at the W.

      • http://www.janiskrums.com jkrums

        I hear you.. sometimes it’s easier. 

  • http://twitter.com/brown_te brown_te

    Why do low and mid-priced hotels provide free WiFi – but higher end hotels feel the need to charge?  That model feel backwards to me.

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Totally backwards. Completely backwards. Ass backwards.

    • http://engag.io/ William Mougayar

      They should take a page from Starbucks when they made wifi free there. 

    • http://www.justanentrepreneur.com Philip Sugar

       Its everything….notice.  Free coffee in the room, free wifi, free paper, free breakfast, free coffee in the lobby, nobody to try and take your bag to your room.  Seriously I just lugged that F’ing thing through TSA, had to fight for a bin in the plane and lugged to the hotel, Now you are going to take it from the lobby to my room????  That’s like offering to park my car in the driveway after I just fought a three hour traffic jam from hell.

  • K_Berger

    Couldn’t agree with you more.  Verizon 4G MiFi is excellent.  I was staying at a relative’s house in Miami with DSL and Verizon was way better.  

    And Starwood’s internet is always terrible.  Even if you have status and get it free, it’s way too slow.

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  • http://byJess.net/ Jess Bachman

    I don’t understand why high priced hotels nickle and dime you for services.  Sure if your staying a the Motel 6, charge $6 for a bag of M&M’s, but if it’s $300+ a night… whats the point?  Seems very counter intuitive.

    • http://engag.io/ William Mougayar

      I wished they’d follow the starbucks model. Remember when we used to pay for Wifi at Starbucks. Pouf, gone! The hotel where I’m staying at in NY just offered me free wifi as a courtesy, and just for that gesture, I’m going to book with them again next time and make it my preferred hotel. 

  • RocBusinessman

    Just be careful.  Unless you’re grandfathered in as I was that Nifty Verizon 4g mifi device has a data cap and if you exceed that cap (which they don’t warn you about before you do) you may find yourself paying a small fortune in overage fees.  You can monitor the cap through the devices web connection or online, and what the cap is depends on your service agreement with them.

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Yup – I’ll pay attention. I have 8GB I think.

  • http://technbiz.blogspot.com paramendra

    Six is much! ;-)

  • http://twitter.com/chrismoodycom Chris Moody

    The Verizon 4G MiFi won my personal gadget of the year award for 2011.  By the way, Verizon sells two 4G mifi devices.  The one you got (and the one I have now) is made by Novatel.  It is MUCH better than the Samsung version.  I originally got the Samsung version because it was the first one to come out and it was terrible.  

  • Cap’n Jack

    Switching to the Verizon iphone with the mobile hot spot will give the exact same service without the need to carry around two devices. I find the signal is as good and the device itself less problematic.

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Are you sure? The Verizon iPhone isn’t 4G. This is.

      • http://www.justanentrepreneur.com Philip Sugar

         Also when you tether with Verizon they charge you an extra $20.  By the time they discount and everything, its only an extra $20 for the MiFi.  And you get the extra data (doesn’t count against phone), extra battery, and ability to talk on the phone.

        I tried to cancel my MiFi service to save a few bucks and tether and I went crawling back in a day.

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  • http://engag.io/ William Mougayar

    Funny you’re writing this, I’m about to go into a Verizon store in NYC as I’m choosing them as my US cell provider after comparing vs. the other ones. 

  • http://www.charliecrystle.com Charlie Crystle

    I’m dropping my mifi because the connectivity on the train from NYC to Lancaster is terrible. And the train’s wifi mirrors the performance, so I’m pretty much SOL on the train. 

    About to leave ATT (thankfully) for cell service, so probably heading to Sprint–if I can find out how good it is on the train line :)

    • http://www.justanentrepreneur.com Philip Sugar

       The phrase: Verizon might suck but Sprint BLOWS applies here.

  • http://twitter.com/ReplytoAll Robert Pease

    Agreed

  • http://engag.io/ William Mougayar

    Update: I bought the same Verizon MiFi just now, instead of getting a 2nd US phone. What a convenience and it will pay for itself in one month. Goodbye hotel charges, Boingo, looking for Starbucks to connect, etc… 

    Thanks Brad! Your timing was impeccable for this one.

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Yippee! Seriously – it’s a total win.

      • http://engag.io/ William Mougayar

        MiFi = Mi Freedom . I loved walking in NYC with it in my pocket & on iPhone without roaming charges.

    • http://startupnorth.ca Jevon

      Funny, I just did the same thing. I ended up with a Spring 3G Mifi (I needed prepaid…) but to be honest it is great. I turn off data roaming (Canadian plan) and just put the Mifi in my computer bag. 

      For a startup it is the ultimate clutch performer when you need to demo as well. 

      I’m hooked now, which makes me want to upgrade to 4G even more. 

      • http://engag.io/ William Mougayar

        Cool. The companion to this is a Skype mobile number, then you’re in good shape.

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