Vodaphone appears to be the first cellular carrier in the UK to actually introduce the little beasties. Andrew Grill’s “London Calling” blog has an excellent description of them based on his early first-hand experience. His tale includes both acquiring and installing the device. That he is able to extend cellular coverage into the basement flat (apartment) of a Victorian era home seems especially useful.
Every major carrier has announced some kind of plan to introduce Femtocells some time soon. While there certainly are benefits to the technology the rollout seems to be a certain amount of competitive “me too-ism.”
Femtocells are something of a contrast from the T-Mobile offering called T-Mobile @ Home. That service is based on using Wifi when at your location, thus it requires dual mode cell phones that can make calls over GSM or Wifi. In fact, you can even start a call on one network then transition to the other as you enter/depart the area served by your T-Mobile Wifi AP.
The reliance upon dual mode phones limits the handsets available for use with T-Mobile @ Home. This is why we’d never go for it around here, although my brother-in-law has had it for some time. He reports that they are saving money by (1) not using cellular air-time minutes while around the house, even though they make all their calls using their cell phones, and (2) not having a land-line any longer.
Both approaches to cellular service place additional burden on the end user. Not only do you need to provide the broadband connection, but you should also consider the use of a UPS to ensure that your phone service is sustained during a power outage. You’ll need to keep your entire core network running. That might include;
- Cable modem/DSL modem
- Router
- Switch
- Wifi access point or femtocell
None of this should be news for anyone operating a home office. But residential users are accustomed to the phone service “just working” during a power outage. That’s certainly not going to happen with any kind of VoIP.