Tech Sweden is abuzz with news of Telia’s iPhone pricing plans having been released today. Unlike the AT&T contracts in the U.S., Telia’s contracts for Sweden don’t directly include unlimited data transfer. Also unlike the AT&T contracts, at first blush (and subsequent for that matter) the Telia contracts seem really pretty expensive, especially the iMaxi plan, which starts at about $150/month!
So, looking to maximize my bang for the buck, I worked up a little spreadsheet showing the monthly and total costs for the various phone models and plans.
The figures in bold are prices straight from Telia’s site.
The figures in light blue are monthly recurring costs for the stated data amounts, and a second row for unlimited data amounts (arrived at by adding in the cost of Telia’s 9kr/day “maxtaxa”; Note that this represents the maximum amount you’d pay in a month, assuming you blew past the free amount in the first day and kept using some amount of data transfer every single day of the month)
The pale green figures show the absolute smallest total cost for each of the two models, and the pale purple figures show the smallest total cost for each of the two assuming unlimited data. Note that these all wind up being for 18-month contracts, so for comparison’s sake I’ve included extended calculations for the 18-month contracts, adding a row for what you’d pay if you continued with a normal Telia “fastpris” account at 199/month, and another row that adds in that plus the “maxtaxa” to arrive at the costs for unlimited data.
The dark green figures show the smallest total 24-month cost for each model, and the dark purple figures show the smallest total 24-month cost for each model assuming unlimited data.
I haven’t calculated anything around extra minutes or extra SMS, since I (and probably many other iPhone users) assume that data usage will be a much more important factor, and in my case I’m sure that I’ll seldom use more than 100 minutes or 100 SMS per month.
Some interesting points pop out when looking at this. For one thing, the more expensive plans really seem disastrously expensive, especially iMaxi. If you’re not planning on calling for 16 hours a month or sending 1000 SMS/month (who does that?) then those really seem like a waste. Even if you were using that much, it seems like the standard tariffs, combined with the iMini plan, would still be much cheaper. Again, for my anticipated usage I really don’t care, but maybe someone who really is a big voice or SMS user will calculate these things.
Another thing that strikes me is that there is an interesting pattern to these numbers. If you look at the dark purple and dark green figures, the cheapest totals (for minimum and unlimited data) for each model, they both are for a 24-month contract. Compared to building an equivalent usage period by combining an 18-month contract and a 6-month “fastpris”, they are just barely cheaper; precisely 200kr in each case. And that’s all assuming that Telia’s “fastpris” and “maxtaxa” will remain at their current levels for the next 18 months. If they get even just a tiny bit cheaper, or if another operator has a better deal for iPhone users 18 months from now, then the 18-month contract will turn out to be a better deal in the long run.
So, it seems that financially, whichever of the two models you’re looking to buy, the iMini 18-month plan seems like the way to go. Again, things may be different if you plan on doing lots of voice calls or SMS, but I’ll leave that for someone else to figure out.
Just in time for WWDC ’08, allow me to introduce you to Twucket.
Twucket is a new Twitter client for Mac OS X that I am releasing as freeware. I created Twucket because I wasn’t happy with any of the available ways to view my Twitter page. The actual twitter website is a hugely-rendered page, and requires you to go to the browser now and then to see if anything has come in; The standalone clients I tried were either wasteful of screen real estate, or didn’t fit in with the overall Mac GUI, or contained ads.
Twucket suffers from none of those problems. Its interface is minimalist and small, it behaves like a normal Mac application, and it doesn’t insert ads into the display. What it does offer is a compact, simple Twitter interface with a few features that Twitter users will probably appreciate. It uses a relatively small amount of screen real estate per message, so you can leave a small window open in a corner of your screen that is still large enough to show the latest 4 or 5 messages you’ve received.
I do have additional plans for future versions of Twucket, but today is the day for 1.0.0. If you’re a Twitter user, please give it a try and let me know what you think!
Podcasts. Either you’re listening to them, or you’re not. For me, living geographically removed from the American mediasphere, podcasts are a great way to keep up with American and other English-language professionally-produced audio content, not to mention all the stuff that people are putting out there on their own.
It’s a bit like having your own radio station, just full of stuff you actually want to hear, that you can listen to whenever you want. I’ve usually got my iPod half-full with a variety of shows; I don’t listen to each episode of each show, but I’ve got a pretty wide span so I can pick whatever I want at whatever moment I feel like listening.
I don’t often see people writing about what podcasts they’re listening to, and randomly browsing podcast sites looking for good shows takes time, so it’s not always easy to find the good stuff that’s out there. Just for the sake for sharing, here are a few of my favorites.
Harry Shearer, the voice of many of the Simpsons characters, and one of the co-stars of the classic film Spinal Tap (in the role of Derek Smalls, the one with the incredible sideburns/mustasche combo) gives us this weekly glimpse into the news, focusing on politics and entertainment, rounded off with a bit of sketch comedy. Satirical, insightful, almost always funny.
Each week, This American Life picks a topic, and presents a handful of segments about it using interviews, short-story readings, or other forms of audio journalism. No matter what the subject matter, it always feels like an hour well-spent. Chicago Public Radio produces this (mostly-)weekly show.
This is one of the very first podcasts I ever subscribed to. Nuno Nunes presents a handful of covers, songs performed by someone other than the original artists. This is huge fun! Although the frequency of updates has declined steadily—first weekly, then bi-weekly, now basically bi-annually—the content is great, and you will always hear something new and unexpected.
Many people have seen Dan Savage’s Savage Love advice column in the alternative press; I read it for years in one of the Minneapolis/StPaul free papers before moving to Sweden. Fortunately Dan has embraced this new digital age, and now offers a phone number where people can call in and record their questions, and he offers them advice, sometimes calling them back to get more info. Though the vast majority of the callers have problems and concerns far from my own life, it’s pretty interesting to hear the concerns of bisexual grammar fetishists living in poly relationships with jesus freaks. If this sounds vaguely Jerry Springer-esque, don’t worry, it’s not.
I’ve been so busy (and having so much fun with) work lately, that I’ve been neglecting politics to some extent, especially here. In fact, I now see that my latest entry filed under politics was 19 months ago!
Well, time to catch up. Here’s an interview with Naomi Wolf, discussing topics from her latest book, The End of America. In this interview, she describes having discerned 10 steps that tyrants of the 20th century used to subvert democratic systems in their own countries, converting them to dictatorships. It shouldn’t surprise anyone to learn that the piratical crew at the helm of the U.S. government have already implemented a number of these items, with more on the way.
Near the end she mentions the American Freedom Campaign, a bi-partisan movement determined to take away the powers that Bush has grabbed for himself, and restore the checks and balances described by the constitution. This seems like a good thing to me.
Really, it’s hard for me to understand head-in-the-sand republicans who willfully ignore the power imbalance that the current administration has created, giving so much power to the executive branch. It works out well for republicans as long as there’s a republican president, but what if (gasp) a democrat actually wins the presidency the next time? Do they want a democratic president having the same kinds of powers that Bush now has, but applying them towards the progressive goals they so despise? Or is there a unspoken understanding amongst this crowd that things have been sufficiently “fixed” that there simply cannot be anything but republicans in the presidency, come hell or high water?