Online on the Road

winton.jpg
Hot artesian spring water is used in many unexpected places in outback Queensland.
Be careful when you wash your hands in the Public toilets in Winton. The water is hot !

Online via mobile phone - Online in Motels - Around Australia - Jazclass Links


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ONL 1 - Online via Mobile phone

A traveller anywhere in Australia is never far away from internet access. Internet cafes and/or libraries with online access are in many small towns throughout the country and an increasing number of caravan parks also have internet facilities. All the same more and more travellers prefer to use their own laptops while on the road, as it is so convenient.

Most of my online access since October 2002 has been while travelling. For this I use a Kyocera 2235 mobile CDMA phone with a USB cable connection to my Macintosh iBook laptop computer. The same setup is available for Windows based PCs.

I found North Australian Radios in Winnellie, Darwin (member of the Leading Edge group of shops around the country) most helpful in selecting and setting up my online access. I also purchased a car antennae from them to increase my coverage, but found I rarely needed it.
(At the time staff of all the Telstra franchise shops I consulted appeared to have very little idea about mobile access. Perhaps they have improved by now.)

I have used this setup all around Australia and had good access everywhere, except in Eucla (on the Nullabor Plain at the WA/SA border) where there was at the time (November 2002) no CDMA network available.
I have not been back since but believe that CDMA is available there now too.

Many small towns around Australia rely entirely on the Telstra CDMA network and travellers who plan to go around Australia should be well aware of this.

Telstra is increasing its CDMA network continuously with many more small communities now being connected. Between Mt Isa and Darwin for example I noticed (May, 2004) that there is now Telstra CDMA coverage in Camooweal , Barkley Homestead, Threeways , Elliott , Mataranka , Katherine and Adelaide River. A vast improvement since a year or so ago.

The mobile phone connection is of course slow (14.4 kbps) and it takes about 3-5 minutes to send and receive say 6 to 10 email messages. But this costs only between $1 and $2, which is comparable, if not cheaper, than Internet Cafe access.
Add to this the convenience of sending your messages directly from wherever you are and at any time, and using only one access number (mobile phone charges are the same wherever you phone to).
For longer online sessions, or sending and receiving photographs, it is best to find fixed line access in a public library or a motel.

Technology is moving fast, but the Kyocera mobile phones are still my preferred choice. The newer models now feature 'bluetooth' (cordless) connection to the laptop and higher modem speeds for data transfer.


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ONL 2 - Online access via fixed line in a Motel

If you are staying at a resort or motel for a while, or just having a "luxury break" from camping for a night or two, you may wish to go online via the provided fixed phone line.
If so you need to watch out for two snags.

1. Do you have a local access number ?
If you are somewhere in the outback your service provider may not have a local access points for you to phone into. This may mean paying for a timed long distance call.
Therefore, before you leave home, download a list of all local access point of your service provider. Access via Telstra Bigpond is in this regard very good, as with one universal number you have local access from any place in Australia.

2. Dialling for an Outside line
On the phones in many motels and resort rooms one usually has to dial a single digit number first (usually an '0' or a '9') to get access to an outside line.

You therefore need to type this number (shown in red) at the front of your normal entry number.

For example :     0 8999 0011

On some motel switch boards there is a short time delay after the 0 has been received before the outside line is connected.
As a result the laptop modem may already be partly through the rest of the access number (899..) before the outside line is available.
The result is a malfunction of the connection.

This happened to me while staying at a resort on the Gold Coast (in SE Queensland).
I tried and tried and just could not get connected. Finally I decided to get hold of the resort manager and he initiated me into the simple procedure to follow.

To overcome the problem type one or more commas ( , ) between the first digit (outside line request digit) and the actual access number, like this

0 , 8999 0011   or       0 , , 8999 0011


Each comma produces a short time delay and one or two of these will buy enough time for the outside line to become active.

Works like a charm.
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© 2004 Michael Furstner (Jazclass).
All rights reserved.