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Mobile Internet Device - Dongle
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amyanne
Posts: 9 Forumite
Hi. I'm looking for some advice please. I'm living in a house (mine) where the internet, wifi, tv etc is provided by Sky which was set up by my tenant (a family member). I'm paying half towards the bill - £100 per month. However, I need to save some money. I don't need all the Sky features, the only tv I watch is BBC news plus radio which I access via my laptop. I don't download films or music - just Google, fb, bbc iplayer/radio, and emails. I used to use a dongle in France quite successfully and can get one on a 30 day PAYG basis for about £22 - 15 GB data. I know contracts are cheaper but I'm planning to sell the house shortly so don't want to tie myself up with a 24 month contract. My queries are would the dongle interfere with the Sky set up if I used it at the same as my tenant was accessing Sky (this is my main concern) and how much data would I need to cope with my usage? I have a Samsung Android mobile phone which has a Mobile hotspot feature. Can I use this to connect to the internet instead of buying a dongle. Can I connect it to my laptop and access internet etc. that way. I know I can go into the local EE shop and ask them but I'd like some idea of pros and cons beforehand (you may have guessed I'm not that technical!) TIA. Gill
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Comments
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A 4G dongle won't interfere with anything the Sky setup is doing so long as you ensure it is using a different wifi channel. The one thing you mentioned that can require a fair bit of bandwidth so possibly eating into that 15GB is iPlayer - http://mobilenetworkcomparison.org.uk/how-much-bandwidth-does-iplayer-use/ Similarly extensive use of youtube or any other video streaming. Some apps such as Snapchat can chew up bandwidth too.
You can use the Android phone hotspot to connect a laptop. Check the contract to make sure it doesn't prohibit "tethering" but I think these days they pretty much all allow it.0 -
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