Reliance Netconnect Broadband+ – A BIG Failure

The idea of mobility had always excited me. I really like to be able to access my work and other stuff while being on the move.

Wireless internet access has been around for quite some time in the form of GPRS and EDGE tethered through mobile phones. But the speed had always been so bad that one could not ever think about doing any “work” on such a connection.

I was very excited when HSIA became a reality in India. Many providers like Tata Teleservices, Virgin Mobile, Reliance Communications, etc started providing USB sticks which could be used for mobile internet access up to 3.1 Mbps. The USB sticks were however programmed devices which were locked to the provider. This very reason of putting money and getting stuck to a provider kept me from subscribing to such a service.

However this time when I was going to Calcutta for a surgery, I convinced myself for getting a USB modem which would allow me to have internet access while I was in the Hospital. I had cornered on two providers, Reliance NetConnect Broadband+ and Tata Photon+.

My first impression with Tata was terrible. I got in touch with a representative who visited my office with a demo device. The speed was pretty impressive. However it did not work with Snow Leopard due to some driver issues. I decided to go for the connection and submitted all the forms and documents to the executive. However he did not turn up for the next 2 days with the new device. I thanked my stars and decided to move on.

A couple of days later, I visited the Reliance Website and found an option to buy the USB device online. However I left the registration form incomplete on the online store and decided to research a bit more. Strangely I got a call from a Reliance Executive in Delhi who wanted to “assist” me in buying the device. I must say that he had excellent marketing skills and he “got” me. He promised to get the device delivered by the end of the day and he held up his end of the deal.

As per the conversation with the executive, the device was supposed to be activated the next day. But that didn’t happen. It didn’t happen the day after, either. I just got too busy with work to follow it up further.

3 days later, I got a call on my mobile phone inquiring whether I am using the Netconnect Device. On cross questioning, the executive confirmed that the device has already been activated.

Now comes the tricky part. Most of the users for these devices use Microsoft Windows. So when I asked about Snow Leopard to the customer care, they were completely clueless. However I did find an “installer” for MacOS on the Reliance Website. I am always skeptical about installing software just for the heck of it. I was trying to find out if I could get around without installing their “Advanced Dialler”. I was using a ZTE device and unfortunately I found out that it is not possible to not use the dialer. Apparently its not just the dialer, but it also includes a driver for the device.

Strangely, I found that my battery runtime drastically went down when I was using the Netconnect Device. I found it hard to believe that just a USB stick is pulling down my Battery life of 4+ hours to just 2.5 hours. Further poking around revealed that iostat was reporting back extremely high disk writes. Curious about what is going on, I checked with lsof which files are being used. To my horror, I found that the dialer is so advanced that it writes an extremely verbose debug log to /var/log/system.log. As a result of the continuous writes, the disk was active the whole time the system was on battery and hence the low battery time.

At this point, I had enough of mobility and finally sold the device on Ebay. I guess the eternal wait for the auction of 3G spectrum in India resumes.

Reliance Rest in Peace. :(

iPhone 3Gs launch in India

The much awaited iPhone 3Gs launched in India today. I had always felt that Apple does not understand the potential of the Indian market and the launch today further reinforced that idea.

iPhone is being offered in India only in the locked variant by 2 different carriers AirTel and Vodafone. There has been no plans to launch the unlocked variant. The pricing has however got me stunned.

A locked iPhone is being sold at prices which are same as the unlocked phones sold in other parts of the world. The flagship mobile from Apple comes with a price tag of Rs. 35,500 for 16GB and Rs. 41,500 for 32 GB variants. Apple has cleverly mentioned that any iPhones which are jailbroken would be not covered under warranty.

I think this is a fundamental mistake. Apple does not provide direct support in India. It is provided through Apple Authorized Service Providers. The support quality is very patchy and questionable. Most of the times, I have needed support for my Apple Macbook was because of a hardware issue. The one stop answer for all software issue was to reinstall the OS which was definitely not an option for me. Apple iPhone is not a phone for the masses. The people who use iPhones are mostly technically sound and know what they are doing. If things turn out where a customer requires help from the AASPs, most of the times the phone is dead and they do not have a way to find out whether it has been jailbroken or not.

One of my theories why the prices of iPhone are skyrocketing in India is because of the excessive greed of the service providers. It has boomeranged earlier when iPhone 3G sales was a disaster. Now whether history will repeat itself or not, only time will tell.

On a personal note, I firmly believe that the only product *worth* buying from Apple are the Macbook Pros.

High memory consumption with Safari

MacOS has always been a platform of choice for me on Portable PCs. I am a purist so I tend to use native applications on my PC.

My primary web browser is Safari (currently version 4.0.5) and it works decently well for my needs. However recently I noticed that it has been consuming excessive amount of resident memory. While staring the browser the memory usage was fine, but as and when time progresses, it started consuming upto 1GB of Resident memory and started swapping out other applications to the disk.

Searching on Google landed me to lots of people facing the same problem. I was not using any external plugins, so chances of there being a memory leak is eliminated.

Turned out that Safari was trying to prefetch lots of things for “Top Sites” which it shows when a new Tab is opened. Going to Preferences -> General and changing both New windows open with and New tabs open with to “Empty Page” seems to have fixed the problem.

I am still keeping a watch on Activity monitor to make sure that the problem is indeed fixed.

New Twitter App on MacOS

Microblogging has recently gained a lot of traction on the cyberspace. Everyone seems to be a very interested. I also decided to try out my chances at Microblogging.

There were quite a few things which were playing around in my mind. First of all, why would people be interested in finding out what I am interested in and what I am doing at a certain point of time during the day. Most of the posts I have been coming across in Twitter and FaceBook makes me respond with “So… ?” Also the idea of fitting your entire emotions and ideas within 140 characters seemed to be a bit too much for me.

I have this bad habit of trying to look under the hoods of everything. My first task was to find a suitable microblogging client which was native to MacOS. While there are many clients out there, I started off with Twitterific. This client does a neat job of hiding behind the menubar without creating useless clutter on my dock which I think is a very good idea. However soon I got bored with the UI and the way it manages tweets. The entire idea of putting all information from public timelines to direct messages seemed a bit too much to me. Also, there seemed to be a race condition in which if I do not have a working internet connection on my notebook when Twitterific starts, it consumes too much CPU.

The next app to be tested was TweetDeck. There are lots of good reviews for this app. However this is an Adobe Air application and I am allergic to that.

The next app which I was really looking forward to was Tweetie Unlike the other two applications, this is not a freeware. There is an ad supported edition which I think is pretty good. The application is pretty sleek and also pretty low on memory requirements. It just consumes over 38MB of Resident memory.

The only thing I didn’t like about Tweetie is it does not have a provision to be hidden from the dock. It is possible to manually edit the plist for this app and make this invisible from the dock, but that creates other problems. Also another bug that I found was, if I start this program as a part of my login programs, the icon does not appear on the menubar. I think I am going to open up a support ticket with Atebits Software.

Looks like this is going to be my Twitter client for a while now.

You can follow me on twitter @subhrokar

I took a bite of Apple

Even I took a bite from of the Apple. Recently got my hands on an Apple MacBook Pro. I must say its really an experience and its really hard to believe that a computer can also be so simple and yet a masterpiece. On a first look the interface was new and unknown. But a little bit of interaction, a bit of common sense and I was back on track.

Here are the specifications of my Notebook….Sorry Macbook :)

  • Intel Core 2 Duo 2.4GHz
  • 4GB RAM
  • 160 GB HDD

This notebook runs MacOS 10.5.6 also known as Leopard. MacOS runs the Darwin Kernel which is open source and very similar to FreeBSD. Traditionally being a Unix user, this was of great advantage. It had both the raw power of Unix Shell with Sexy Looks. Added was the advantage of stability. I had kept the notebook running for more than 16 days without any troubles or slowdown. So that speaks for the stability.

The Applications

I have heard about people saying that the applications available for MacOS are not that great. That is completely incorrect. The most important utilities like Office Suites, Messengers and programming languages has all been ported to Macintosh. As a matter of fact, I found Microsoft Office for Mac more stable than Microsoft Office for Windows.

The Dock

The most innovative part which appealed to me was the Dock. This is a complete innovation in itself. On a first impression it seems that its sole job is to house the windows for the running applications. But there is more. You can pull  folder to the dock which you access frequently and that will appear as a stack. This is really convenient as I don’t have to keep on pulling up my Documents folder. The frequently used applications can also be Priory to Leopard, the dock used to be 2 Dimensional in nature. However now it has a 3D look and I really liked that. The magnification of icons are also very cool. 

The Finder

The Finder is also a very clean implementation of Explorer for Mac. Apart from a fairly generic explorer functionality, it has a number of addons as well. The Finder window is divided into 2 panes. The left pane shows the devices and filesystems attached to the computer. The Quick Look feature is also very cool which allows you to sneak a peak at a file without actually opening it. Not only that, Leopard even allows you to save searches which are conducted frequently. This is of great help.

Time Machine

This is a new feature introduced in this version of MacOS. Like the original avatar from the story written by H.G. Wells, Time machine allows the user to restore the complete system to a previous state effectively allowing the user to go back in time. Time machine performs regular backups of the whole system to an external drive or to an Airport Time Capsule. For restoring to a previous version of the hard drive, one can boot off the install CD and resotre from the attached storage.

There are many more features which would be better to be used than to be described. In a word, Leopard is really something which can mutate to be an OS used by a hardcore programmer or by someone who is using a computer for the first time in his/her life.

Rightly said, Think Totally Different.