On Jan. 7, Sprint introduced the Sierra Wireless-made
Overdrive 3G/4G Mobile Hotspot, which will allow up to five WiFi-enabled
devices to connect to Sprint’s 3G/4G network.
The battery-powered Overdrive weighs 4.51 ounces and is 3.14
by 3.14 by 0.61 inches, enabling users to take it anywhere, instead of being
tied to a hotspot. It has a 1.4-inch LCD display that shows battery life and
connectivity status information, GPS is built in, and a microSD slot for up to
16GB can share the additional memory amongst devices.
“This device delivers the connected lifestyle to our
customers in overdrive. The fact that it connects up to five Wi-Fi enabled
devices is especially meaningful because at 4G speeds, customers can download
and upload more data — gigabytes, not megabytes — in a matter
of seconds,” said Dan Hesse, Sprint CEO, in a statement.
“The Overdrive on the 4G network is made for the
multitude of bandwidth-hungry applications customers want to access wirelessly,
like video streaming. 4G beats 3G for speed and for value,” Hesse
continued.
Smartphones with contracts with other carriers, laptops,
gaming devices and cameras can all connect to the Overdrive, which at 4G speeds
offers peak downloads of 10Mbps and peak uploads of 4Mbps. On Sprint’s
EVDO Rev A. 3G network, peak download speeds are up to 3.1Mbps and peak uploads
are 1.8Mbps.
“At Best Buy, we see an amazing amount of new devices
and products from mobile phones to televisions to gaming consoles that are
designed to connect and interact with each other,” said Best Buy CEO
Brian Dunn, in the statement.
“This kind of connectivity is very exciting, but it
can also be complicated to maximize unless you actually see it and understand
it,” Dunn continued. “The Sprint Overdrive will allow us to
showcase our in-store experience by demonstrating how various
WiFi–enabled products work and connect together, whether in the home, on
the go, or both.
On Jan. 5, competitors AT&T
and T-Mobile each announced upgrades to their networks. Both have completed
HSPA 7.2 upgrades to their 3G networks, a speed-boosting step toward their
eventual goals of deploying LTE 4G technology.
Sprint’s 4G network, however, is based on the
competing 4G technology called WiMax, currently being rolled out by independent
company Clearwire, which Sprint holds a majority share of. While
many analysts believe that LTE will eventually be the dominant technology, carrier
TeliaSonera rolled out just the first LTE network in December, in Stockholm,
Sweden.
However, via Clearwire, Sprint currently offers 4G coverage
in 27 U.S. markets, including Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Las Vegas,
Philadelphia, Honolulu and Austin. In 2010, it expects to add Boston, Houston,
New York, San Francisco and Washington, D.C., to the list.
Exclusively from Sprint, the Overdrive will be available as
of Jan. 10 for $99.99, after a $50 mail-in rebate and with a two-year service
agreement. The same day, Sprint will begin offering consumers and businesses a 3G/4G
data plan beginning at $59.99 per month.