

I recommend starting at the carrier's website to see if they operate in the general area you want. His advice is to first pick the network that suits your travels geographically, because even the best online device is worthless if there's no network where you need it.

"You need to look at the entire connection landscape, which also includes the network's technology, hotspot hardware and service plans available." "Picking the right hotspot to get is not a simple decision," says Kagan. The five hotspots range in price from $50 to $149, have a wide variety of plans available and offer a range of sizes, features and online performance. There are also the Boost Netgear Fuse Hotspot and the Karma Go Boost and Karma are Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs) that buy connect time on Sprint's networks. They include, from the major networks, AT&T's Unite Express, T-Mobile's 4G LTE HotSpot Z915 and Verizon's Ellipsis MHS800L. I took a look at five of the latest mobile hotspots that connect over the major national networks with prepaid services. A prepaid plan lets you add data into your account and use it as needed (although the plans vary among the service providers). You're not locked into a two-year commitment with a service plan that you pay for every month whether you need it or not. For others who travel less frequently, it can end up being expensive and wasteful. Traditionally, a mobile hotspot requires a two-year contract and a monthly data plan - which makes sense only for those who travel several times a month. A personal hotspot, on the other hand, can provide online access to eight or ten participants at a time - perfect for an offsite meeting, even on a train or in a van. Why get a personal Wi-Fi hotspot (and have one more thing to carry, charge and potentially lose) when your smartphone can operate as a hotspot? Because using a phone as a hotspot can chew through the battery in a very short time, and when you want to collaborate with others, it's often limited to only a few users at once. "It can mean the difference between being online and off." "Having a personal hotspot can let you connect at office speeds just about anywhere," says Jeff Kagan, an independent wireless analyst. There is a better way, and it involves bringing your own mobile network with you. Unfortunately, this seems to be the norm these days: Hotels are charging for Wi-Fi service that's mediocre at best. I was constantly waiting for emails and small files to download to my laptop, and video streaming was, to put it charitably, less than smooth. On a recent trip to Philadelphia, I paid my hotel $14 a night for spotty Wi-Fi access that topped out at a mere 2Mbps and often stopped dead in its tracks.
