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Kill a Land Phone, Win a Wi-Fi Phone

(WARNING! Explicit lyrics in the above video.)

Crunch Gear is running a contest, and a fun one at that. All you have to do is send in a video, via e-mail, YouTube or any other video-sharing service of you going medieval on your land line phone. Take a bat, a crowbar, a 20 pound sledge -- it doesn't matter -- and destroy that vestige of land line-based communication. The best entry wins a prize package including:

"A HotSpot-enabled phone (Nokia 6086 or Samsung t409), T-Mobile HotSpot @Home Wi-Fi router (D-Link or Linksys brands) and one year of free T-Mobile HotSpot @Home service that includes (per month) unlimited calls to your myFaves contacts, 2,000 nationwide WHENEVER Minutes®, unlimited T-Mobile-to-T-Mobile domestic calling, 1,500 messages sent, 1,000 messages received, and access to t-zones."

Contest details here. Happy smashing!

From Crunch Gear

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Cell Phones

Make Cell Calls Over Wi-Fi & Save Minutes

Engadget Hands On With T-Mobile's Hot Spot @ Home
Our pals over at Engadget got their tech-greedy mitts on T-Mobile's new Hot Spot @ Home service and have some early impressions. Hot Spot @ Home uses a phone with Wi-Fi to switch between the standard cellular GSM network and Wi-Fi connections for unlimited voice over IP minutes. This basically means that you can potentially save mega money and minutes by using WiFi instead of your cell phone provider's network.

T-Mobile provides you with a Linksys router, but if you already have a Wi-Fi router (and you should) you can simply use yours by entering the network ID and key. Hot-Spot @ Home also comes packaged with free access to all of T-Mobile's hot spots around the country, like those at airports and a certain ubiquitous coffee chain. Seems like a pretty good deal for only $10 a month.

The Engadget folks were pretty pleased with the service -- though it wasn't with out its quirks. Switching from GSM to Wi-Fi wasn't exactly seamless. There was usually a delay of a second or more, and they experienced a few dropped calls. Also, all data is transfered over T-Mobile's cellular network, even when the phone is connected to Wi-Fi.

T-Mobile's Hot Spot @ Home will initially be available with either the Nokia 8086 or Samsung's SGH-T409. Both are pretty standard flip phones (Bluetooth, cameras etc.) with Wi-Fi built in.

Check out the complete review and a hands on gallery at Engadget.

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Computers

Hackers Strike Starbucks Wi-Fi Hotspots

Hotspots Hotter than You ThinkThink twice before you connect to that public Wi-Fi hotspot, because you could fall victim to a new and growing menace called an evil twin attack. It goes a little something like this: A ne'er-do-well uses a laptop to set up a clone of the login site you'd see at a place like Starbucks. You're there, sipping some ridiculously named cup of coffee and decide to get online. What you think is the official Starbucks entrance onto the Web is actually being routed through the hacker's computer, which sneakily keeps track of all the usernames and passwords you type in, regardless of how secure you think they may be.

Once they have that info, they can easily log into your accounts, change the password and lock you out. This technique -- a form of phishing -- allows the attacker to effectively bypass complex Wi-Fi encryption methods like WEP by tricking you into logging directly onto their machine, instead of trying to capture your information out of the air as it goes to the real hotspot.

What can you do? For one thing, try not to log on to bank accounts or other sensitive sites while you're using a public hotspot. But, more importantly, make sure that you always connect to official wireless access points and not just whatever your Wi-Fi device finds. If you see multiple hotspots and you're not sure which is legit, ask someone. It's better to be safe than sorry, especially when your MySpace account is at risk!

From Times Online

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Computers

Free & Cheap Wi-Fi for Everyone with FON

If you have a Wi-Fi-enabled laptop or device, chances are you occasionally get online through hotspots at airports and hotels. Chances are also good that you've seen some pretty high prices. A company called FON hopes to change that by bringing cheap public Wi-Fi to everyone. Thanks to a new deal with Time Warner, it just may succeed.

With FON, the idea is simple: Basically, you buy a FON wireless router from FON for $39.95, which you plug into your broadband connection. The router splits the Wi-Fi network in two: One is secure for your use only, and one is public that anyone within range can use.

Why would you want to share? Well, if you travel a lot or like to use Wi-Fi somewhere besides your home, you (as a FON member) get free access to any other FON member's Wi-Fi hotspot. Right now, the service is huge in Europe, but only has about 60,000 members in the U.S. The Time Warner deal, which will include the FON service built-in to select routers, should up the number of FON hotspots in this country significantly. What's more, you can rest easy knowing you won't get kicked off of your service, since many broadband providers frown upon the practice of blasting your Wi-Fi connection out to the public on purpose for anyone to use.

The good news is you don't have to be a FON member to use the hotspots -- non-members can connect to FON hotspots for just $2 or $3 a day.

It seems that Wi-Fi hotspots are never around when you need them, so here's hoping the FON deal with Time Warner is just the first of many similar deals here in the U.S.


From USA Today

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