With millions of users all over the world and a full collection of open source and freeware software (as well commercial software), PortableApps.com is the most complete solution for life on the go. PortableApps.com was founded by John T. Haller, whose Portable Firefox started the portable software. The same software or hardware typically used with modems (such as Procomm or Minicom) could be used with this type of connection. A null modem adapter is a small device with plugs on both end which is placed on the end of a normal 'straight-through' serial cable to convert it into a null-modem cable.
Advice and comments would be very welcome on the subject of PAYG dongle (non-contract) for PC laptop…....coming to San Pedro de Alcantara for 2 months and I need a decent internet connection for that time only. The apartment I am in has neither broadband nor wi-fi set up. ‘Prepago’ dongle the best answer? If so, who to choose and how to get through the paperwork etc?
Have read about BIMGO, SIMYO, Vodafone etc etc but still not really clearer on who to go for. Interested in good price, but also reliability. I won’t be downloading music, films, videos etc so really only need decent speed internet connection to let me surf and do emails. All thoughts and insights gratefully received!
Many thanks.
Getting internet in Spain can be frustrating for a tourist or visitor as it’s expensive compared to many other countries and Wi-Fi isn’t as readily available as broadband in many areas, so the service can be spotty at best. But, when I recently signed up for a month’s worth of Movistar internet, I never expected it to be quite so bad. That Movistar has now been voted Spain’s Worst Company three years in a row really isn’t surprising to me. That’s why I also recommend any tourist or visitor to Spain avoid Movistar like the plague — unless you want to be scammed out of your money from a company that offers zero customer service and an extremely inferior product.
My sad story with Movistar began when I signed up for a month’s internet service. I’m currently back in Spain for just a month, so I don’t mess with contracts for internet, as they’re simply not cost-effective for me. So, I went to a Movistar booth at a Carrefour branch and bought a Movistar dongle, which came with €12 euros of internet access free. The dongle cost €39.95 for 500MB. Of course, I had asked the woman at the Movistar booth for a 1GB dongle, as I’m online so much but she took 30 minutes to sign me up for internet, and then managed to sign up the wrong dongle. I didn’t have another 30 minutes to wait, so took the 500MB dongle instead.
I got home, powered up my computer and installed the Movistar software from the dongle. Very fast, it took about 3 minutes and I was ready to go.
When Movistar internet first powers up, you have a choice of Movistar Deberes, Movistar Internet and Movistar Internet Directo. Be very careful which you connect to though, as at least one of them uses your MB data allowance much faster than the others. I signed on with Movistar Internet originally and was horrified to see over 150MBs of data had been used in just 10 minutes — with no downloading, no videos and no photographs.
Anyway, a long story short, the €12 of internet credit I got with the Movistar dongle ended up being used up in less than an hour. I then tried to get my Movistar account recharged online, but after using 3 credit cards all of which I’ve used elsewhere with no problems, Movistar wouldn’t accept any of them. So, I walked into town, paid another €10 for new Movistar credit and got back online. This time, it lasted just over an hour and a half and that €10 credit was used up too. I tried to get a Movistar monthly data allowance for a set fee, but the woman at the Movistar store told me I had to go back to the store I purchased the dongle at, which was over an hour away.
So, the day after I went into the Movistar store in a neighboring town and tried to get a one month data allowance paid for, or to get Wi-Fi, as broadband is simply too expensive. Again, I was told I would have to go back to the Movistar shop I purchased the dongle from — can you say “Movistar, expensive and useless”?
Another major problem with Movistar for anyone who doesn’t speak or read Spanish, and that’s usually most tourists and visitors to Spain, their website is in Spanish. Unlike Vodafone and Orange that provide concise, clear instructions in several languages, after the first screen on the Movistar website, everything is in Spanish — again, absolutely useless if you have a problem.
Needless to say, I gave up on Movistar after one day of using it and a wasted €49.95 for two and a half hours internet usage and hooked myself up to the free Wi-Fi system at the hotel I was staying at. Sure, I might have to sit in the bar to use it but it’s free, fast and a far superior product to the garbage Movistar is selling.
Movistar Dongle Software Free
From now on, I wouldn’t touch Movistar with a 10 foot pole. Terrible customer service, an inferior product, broadband internet that just sucks the life out of your data allowance, and a website that, as it’s all in Spanish, is about as helpful as tits on a bull for anyone who doesn’t speak Spanish.
Movistar Dongle Software Windows 10
Movistar? The worst company in Spain. Well, it’s the worst Spanish company I’ve ever dealt with, that’s for sure.