google walking directions im egypt

it’s nice to have directions (walking and navigation) in egypt – quite useful (albeit imperfect).

it’s nice to have directions (walking and navigation) in egypt – quite useful (albeit imperfect).
in the us, you can have an unlimited data plan with most of the mobile carriers (well, there’s now a 200 mb (or 2gb) cap on at&t (depending on how much you pay)). since i didn’t use my phone for tethering in the us, my monthly usage usually didn’t exceed 200mb/month. coming to egypt, i hoped to have mobile internet (to be able to get emails as they come, etc). here’s what i found:
on your laptop
for mobile internet (on a laptop, etc), all three providers have usb 3g internet modems with data plans. your best bet is etisalat as it offers the highest data usage before the “fair use policy” kicks in (before your speed gets restricted to 56kbps) – unless you don’t mind paying the extra money to vodafone for the faster speed. avoid the “pay as you go” or “prepaid” data plans. the monthly “unlimited” plans are in the ballpark of 150-300LE/month (depending on the speed and provider).
these guys also have capped-postpaid data plans (500mb/mo for 43LE with vodafone or 50LE with mobinil). see their websites for more details.
note that you can pull out the sim card from the usb modem and put it in your cellphone. also note that the usb modem i got from etisalat worked both under mac (out of the box) and linux (with minor configurations on ubuntu lucid).
on mac, after their application sets up the internet preferences, close their application and connect directly from the internet connections pane. their app uses a lot of resources (in addition to the large amount of resources used by the modem itself).
on your mobile
avoid prepaid/”pay as you go” for data
prepaid/”pay as you go” is great for voice calls. so why do i suggest staying away from the “pay as you go” models for internet? because the billing is not right. i ran some bandwidth monitors on my nexus one and compared the reported data usage to what i was billed for, and it didn’t line up. i called vodafone and got some money back once, but it’s not worth the hassle. a friend with the vodafone usb internet stick also pointed out that the reported usage he was seeing seemed unreasonably high.
how to disable the internet on your smart phone
- on any android phone, APNdroid is your friend. you may also want to look at 3G Watchdog, another really good app that monitors your 3g usage (and allows you to set rules and automatically run APNdroid when over your set limit, etc).
- on the iphone (or any other phone), changing your APN manually is the best bet (add some random characters before it so that it doesn’t resolve and thus doesn’t connect).

my macbook after the accident
during the accident mentioned in the previous post, the laptop was in the trunk on the far left side (the place that took the impact from the truck hitting it). when i returned home, i found that my macbook had become officially paralized (the screen was cracked, so light would come out from the screen, but you couldn’t see anything. also, the laptop can no longer sit properly and the casing was deformed). miraculously, al7amdulillah, it did not die. it still had full cognitive abilities (with much trouble, i was able to finally get ssh and vnc access to the machine to get my data off of it).