EVDO Is Computing on the GO

Fri Jul 14, 2006 12:35PM EDT

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I have a friend who cuts out of the office every Friday afternoon during winter to go skiing. On the three-hour drive to Tahoe, her boyfriend drives and she treats the front seat as an Internet-connected mobile office. How? An EVDO connection to the Internet.

"EVDO" stands for "Evolution-Data Optimized." It's a wireless standard that uses cell phone technology to connect computers and mobile devices like PalmPilots and smart phones to the Internet.

EVDO Modems for Your Computer
You can use a PC card as your EVDO modem, sliding it into the PCMCIA slot on the side of your laptop. The card acts as a modem and antenna. The PC card snaps into your laptop, making a direct connection between your computer and the Internet, working like any other peripheral device. Installation is pretty simple, and the only downside I experienced was that it stuck out of my laptop on the side, so when I pulled the laptop out of my bag or shoved it back in, the EVDO card would occasionally snag.

EVDO Cell Phone as Modem
The other option is to use an EVDO cell phone as a modem to connect it to your computer. Using either a USB cable or a wireless Bluetooth connection, these phones hook into your computer system and do the job of connecting to the Internet.

Certain cell phones are enabled to act as EVDO modems: the Palm Treo 700p, the LG VX9800, the Motorola RAZR V3c, the Motorola E815, the LG VX8100, and the RIM BlackBerry 7130e, to name a few. Other cell phones have built-in Internet and email applications that optimize the EVDO network, but they don't hook up to your computer to act as a modem.

Connection Speeds
The EVDO connection speeds are good; when using an EVDO PC card I felt the connection was slightly slower than my DSL at home, but considering the fact that I was doing 60 miles an hour in the car, I was amazed at the speed and consistency of the Internet downloads. People using the cards have clocked speeds all across the spectrum from 90k to 750k. Like broadband connections at home, the speeds vary.

The real downside on all of this high-speed wireless connectivity is price. The cards and phones are not cheap, and the connection fees can run $60 and up each month for the data plan alone.

Want to learn more about EVDO? Check out these links: 

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  • 6 Posted by jpd1821 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:42PM EDT Report Abuse

    I have a Verizon card and little did I know when I decided to replace my old laptop that there were 2 different sizes of pci cards... My new Dell came with the mini pci. In my quest to get the new smaller style Verizon told me it would be $300 bucks for the card cause I was already in a contract so I looked into my options.... I now have a Kyocera Kr1 router the pci card plugs right into the router and converts it over to the standard wireless, which allows me to hook up multiple computers wirelessly wherever I have Verizon service even in the car (cause it includes a cigerette lighter adapter).

  • 7 Posted by cybercitoonline on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    EVDO technology is been useful to my work related activities, I've been using a pantech pc card (sprint) for over a year, traveled from Seattle to San Diego and of course in mayor cities had strong signal, even while on the road, besides that, I use a PPC (from sprint also), signal is pretty strong and I'm able to check my emails, use the internet broswer almost everywhere ( I do have extra bateries, use it a lot during the day), all this technology is great, a bit pricey, but worth it you may consider it if you want to improve your work... :)

  • 8 Posted by lrck79@swbell.net on Thu Jul 16, 2009 9:07PM EDT Report Abuse

    I have used the EVDO through Verizon and it worked great!!! Currently I don't have a laptop or travel like I was, so I cancelled my monthly subscription. I will use it again.

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