AT&T confirms tethering coming to iPhone in 2009

Apple and AT&T have apparently figured out a way to tether an iPhone to a laptop, and get those e-mails on the big screen.
(Credit: Apple)AT&T Mobility chief Ralph de la Vega confirmed on Thursday that iPhone 3G users will be able to use their phones as wireless modems at some point next year.
De la Vega made the comments during a conversation with TechCrunch's Michael Arrington at the Web 2.0 Summit on Thursday. "Tethering" an iPhone to a laptop, and using the iPhone's mobile data connection to get online, is a service that iPhone users have wanted for some time but that AT&T was reluctant to provide, perhaps because it feared that a huge influx of traffic could overwhelm its network.
It's not clear when AT&T will roll out the tethering service; some point in 2009 appears to be the only stated time frame.
Last month, Steve Jobs supposedly sent an e-mail to a Gizmodo reader saying Apple and AT&T were working on a tethering plan for the iPhone. But for a brief period this year, a company called NullRiver software sold an application called NetShare that let iPhone users tether their laptops to their phones. Apple pulled the application from the App Store, despite the fact that other carriers selling the iPhone around the world permit tethering and the developer's claim that NetShare did not violate any terms and conditions of the developer program.
Will NetShare be allowed back on the App Store, if tethering is declared legal? Or is Apple planning to develop that software itself, after rejecting the developer's application, as it appears to be doing with a podcast download feature that looks to be coming to the iPhone 2.2 software? We'll have to wait and see.
Tom Krazit writes about the ever-expanding world of Internet search, including Google, Yahoo, online advertising, and portals, as well as the evolution of mobile computing. He has written about traditional PC companies, chip manufacturers, and mobile computers, spending the last three years covering Apple. E-mail Tom.





than wi-fi but I like it. Once hooked up, I can put the phone in my pocket.
At home and work I still use wi-fi, but for restaurants and bars without access, NetShare works for me.
I am sure the NDA from APPLE reads something like above if you ever get something from them. Not fair or legally sound if you ask me.
Any of course, you need to jailbreak your iPhone because apple doesn't want you to have this!
The carriers can't properly plan or provision for data use either, which, in turn, degrades voice quality at times on the WCDMA network. ATTWS has finally figured out how to track down violators of their TOS - enjoy that first bill when you get caught...
AT&T is already ripping us off with outrageous month charges. Surely they're not going to try for even more money for tethering. They provide that service free of charge to other cell phone users now.
Most iPhone owners love Apple and hate AT&T. We should have had tethering on day number 1 when the first iPhone was released.
While there are things that are Apple's fault, like no copy and paste, not everything is.
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by crudis01
November 21, 2008 12:02 PM PST
- Another unfortunate fallout of Apple choosing to "tether" themselves to AT&T which has to worse network of the major players. AT&T also still gets crushed by Apple's horrific percentage takes on everything. AT&T doesn't make the overhead money that Verizon, or even Sprint, does per customer. And AT&T's TV service is a failure, so that haven't been able to link the neat things that Verizon can, or Sprint will begin to do. There is a reason AT&T was going bankrupt before the name was purchased and resurrected. They just don't get it.
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