Screenshot of AT&T’s new iPhone portal for Starbucks hotspots

Filed Under (Gadgets, Internet) by David Chartier on 17-04-2008

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So AT&T has begun its takeover of T-Mobile’s Starbucks hotspots. A friend in Texas saw that AT&T has already moved into one of his local Starbucks, so he did some poking around.

Now under AT&T’s reign, users can get two free hours of WiFi every day. However, the company also designed a portal to make it easy for iPhone users to log in (blurry screenshot above), complete with the ability to purchase memberships or day passes, and even use a coupon or prepaid card, right on the handset.

This is a great idea for coffee drinkers who want to sign up but don’t own notebooks, and those who simply want to roll with an iPhone.

I spoke with a manager in one of my local Starbucks today and asked about how long the AT&T switchover is going to take. She wasn’t positive, but she believes she heard that the plan is to have all ~7,000 stores finished by summer.

Macworld | Starbucks network switch has begun

Filed Under (Business, Internet) by David Chartier on 16-04-2008

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Macworld says AT&T has begun taking over Starbucks WiFi hotspots from T-Mobile. Straight out the gate, AT&T is already doing a bunch of interesting things with the service:

For those who aren’t in AT&T’s thrall already, you can get up to two hours of consecutive free access every day by putting value on a Starbucks stored-value card, and either using it or adding funds to its balance at least every 30 days.

Smart way to add another benefit to those recently refreshed Starbucks Cards.

I’ve been a T-Mobile Hotspot customer for years as I’ve always needed a place to do work and school stuff away from home, and I’ve always thought T-Mobile’s overall handling of the service was pretty pathetic. Never any real promotions, and never a change from the ridiculous prices of $30/month with a one-year contract, $20/month if you’re a T-Mobile wireless customer or Starbucks employee, or a whopping $40 month-to-month.

If you need more than two daily hours, service is $20 a month (I believe without a contract) for non-AT&T broadband customers, or free if you have at least 1.5MB DSL/broadband service as a home customer.

Great move all around. Two hours is a generous offering for the casual user, and $20/month is definitely reasonable for people like me who spend a little more time than the normal customer actually sitting down in a Starbucks to do work.

I, for one, welcome our new Starbucks AT&T hotspot overlords.

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