27 Oct 2008
Posted by J. Angelo Racoma as Connectivity, Gadgets, reviews

I’ve been on the lookout for a contingency connection for those times that my main Bayan DSL account lets me down (which is oftentimes these days). I do have a 3.5G (HSDPA) enabled mobile phone, which I can use as a modem via BlueTooth, but somehow I have found that option to be cumbersome. First, it causes my mobile phone battery to drain quickly, and so it’s not exactly an elegant solution as I would have to worry about notebook/netbook batteries and mobile phone batteries discharging. Also, it’s a bit expensive when used heavily, at PhP 5 per 15 minutes on the Globe network. Sure that’s cheap enough for on the go browsing, but when you’re using your internet connection the whole day, you end up spending more.
Smart recently announced the availability of an unlimited plan that comes with a USB HSDPA modem for PhP 1,500 per month (about $30 per month) and so I decided to visit a nearby Smart Wireless center to inquire and possibly apply. As I submitted my application form I was told that the modem that came with postpaid plans was still the old white Huawei-supplied one, and this reportedly had many connectivity, compatibility and reliability issues. And I was told approval would take two to three days.
I decided to pick up a prepaid kit for the meantime, to evaluate Smart’s service. I’m primarily a Globe user, and so my 3.5G-enabled mobile phone runs on the Globe network. Best try out Smart’s service this time.
Great things about the prepaid kit are:
So far, so good. It’s been a reliable mobile connection for me, for those times I need to connect while out of the office, or when my home-office connection is simply too slow.
I do get slow speeds when the cell site I’m connected to has non-existent or weak HSDPA signals. With this, it tops at 300+ Kbps. Where there are no 3G signals, it tops at 200+ Kbps (EDGE) or 56 Kbps (GPRS). It sucks, but when it’s your only option you will take it. So far I’m able to access most services and ports I need, including instant messengers, FTP, cPanel and the like, where previously these wireless networks imposed some prohibitions with non-HTTP ports.
The provided software was a breeze to install. The USB modem itself has read-only storage, so the drivers for Windows and OS X (Tiger and Leopard) are included. You may have to download drivers and do some tweaks for Linux, though.
You can always just dialup using your OS’s dialer, but the bundled software gives you more options, like the ability to detect what kind of signal you are currently getting, and the ability to lock connection to certain types only (the connection moves across HSDPA, 3G, GPRS, and EDGE depending on signal strength and availability).
168 Kbps down on EDGE.

1.2 Mbps on HSDPA

The retail kit:
Contents:
With the SIM card:
With a USB pen drive (to compare and illustrate size):
With the SIM card just peeking out:
Attached to an HP mini note netbook:

The main advantage, as I see it, is that this takes out the necessity to bring an extra phone or to use your extra phone just to connect. The main disadvantage is that you do have to shell out some money for the unit itself. But at PhP 2,800, that’s already a steal. A couple of weeks ago, this was still retailing at PhP 3,800 (PhP 4,500 farther back).
I do hope my unlimited plan gets approved soon. When that time comes I’ll really get to put the system to an abuse test—whether it can take sustained speeds, and whether it can serve as a reliable connectivity option full-time. Of course I cannot share it among my various computers simultaneously, but again my purpose is for backup connectivity that I can also use while mobile.
When I get that plan approved, I would use it instead with this black modem and I would probably sell the white one (along with the prepaid SIM) or keep it as backup.
Updates: From research, I discovered that the black USB dongle sold with this prepaid pack is the LongCheer WM66. I believe that’s a relative newcomer, compared to Huawei and ZTE, which supplies most other dongles out there. Huawei is usually un-lockable, while ZTE dongles are more difficult (if possible at all) to unlock. But at PhP 2,500 for a prepaid kit, these things are cheap already!
Also, I have a Globe Visibility prepaid kit review upcoming!
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Tags: 3G, Gadgets, HSDPA, reviews, smart, smart-bro | Viewed 3034 times
7 Responses
Andre Marcelo-Tanner
October 27th, 2008 at 1:46 pm
1who has wider HSPDA coverage? Globe or Smart?
Obnoxiousqueer
October 30th, 2008 at 7:16 pm
2I have dsl at home with my wireless router. And I usually bring my portable in coffeeshops or restaurants that pretty much had wifi connections as well. I don’t trust smart kc… sorry…
Globe Visibility Prepaid Kit Review | racoma.com.ph
October 31st, 2008 at 2:51 am
3[...] time I reviewed a Smart Bro plugit prepaid kit, with the intent of trying it out first before plunging into a postpaid subscription. I had [...]
Mark
November 9th, 2008 at 6:23 am
4hey bro how’s it going. i just purchased this wm66 from smart bro too. What i found out is it was made by KPT im not sure if that’s the same with longcheer. anyway do you know any way to unlock this? not that i need to be unlock just wanted to unlock it
daniel
November 15th, 2008 at 3:03 pm
5hi bro my signal is great but when i use it on email its just to slow even my webcam cant connect. can you advise me hpw to configure my webcam
Marco
November 26th, 2008 at 2:17 pm
6hi,
I just want to know if you have any idea on how to unlock the Smart Bro modem (model: LongCheer WM66).
Thanks a lot for the help.
mark figurasin
November 28th, 2008 at 9:40 am
7uhm sir. im just a college student and i just get amused with this kind of offers (just like browsing internet using mobile phone) . .i am convinced already to by this kit but i have doubts about it’s capability/compatibility . . does this prepaid kit have it’s 2 mbps speed? and gets increasing some times? (1.6mbps~ ?) a sales lady representative just explained it to me. some how i get convinced (if it’s real) to buy it but my problem is, I don’t know if it’s compatible with my pc . It’s just a simple pc with pentium 4 1.80ghz,windows xp sp2(dunno if it’s home edition). does my pc suitable for that kind of kit?. . . .thanks for reading my comment . . i would be pleased to have your feed back about my concern.
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