R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T

Free email newsletters




ADVERTISEMENT

Boffin slams 'astronomical' SMS costs

Four times more expensive than receiving data from Hubble

Robert Jaques, vnunet.com 13 May 2008
ADVERTISEMENT

A UK space scientist has claimed that sending a text message is at least four times more expensive than receiving scientific data from space.

The shocking accusation was made by University of Leicester academic Dr Nigel Bannister, and formed the basis of Channel 4's Dispatches programme The Mobile Phone Rip-Off.

Dr Bannister worked out that sending texts via mobile phones works out to be far more expensive than downloading data from the Hubble Space Telescope.

The calculations compared the cost of obtaining a megabyte of data from Hubble and the average 5p cost of sending a text.

"The bottom line is that texting is at least four times more expensive than transmitting data from Hubble, and is likely to be substantially more than that, " said Dr Bannister.

"The maximum size for a text message is 160 characters, which takes 140 bytes because there are only seven bits per character in the text messaging system, and we assume the average price for a text message is 5p.

"There are 1,048,576 bytes in a megabyte, so that's one million/140 = 7,490 text messages to transmit one megabyte.

"At 5p each that's £374.49 per megabyte, or about 4.4 times more expensive than the 'most pessimistic' estimate for Hubble Space Telescope transmission costs."

Dr Bannister was informed by Nasa that it costs £8.85 per megabyte for the transmission of data from Hubble to the Earth.

"This does not include the cost of the ground stations and the time of the personnel along the way, but it is an unambiguous number for that part of the process," he said.

"So that's £8.85 to get each megabyte from Hubble to the first point of contact on the ground, but no further.

"Hence we need to go a little bit further to estimate exactly how much it costs to transmit data from Hubble to the end user, i.e. to the data archive which scientists can access. This is difficult, so I had to make some conservative assumptions."

Dr Bannister estimated that the cost of the data from Hubble could vary between £8.85 and £85 per megabyte, which is much cheaper than the £374.49 per megabyte cost of transmitting one megabyte of text.

"Hubble is by no means a cheap mission, but the mobile phone text costs were pretty astronomical," he concluded.

See also:

AeroplaneBut Viviane Reding warns carriers on pricing  08 Apr 2008
Hi-tech bedSurvey finds technology intruding into the bedroom  10 Mar 2008
SMSAttempt to avoid Darwinism in Brick Lane  07 Mar 2008
Flooded streetu r going 2 gt wt  27 Feb 2008

All Mobile Communications
Tags: Hubble, Mobile, Sms, Text, Communications

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
West Midlands, Warwickshire, United Kingdom | Latham
System Tester/Test Analyst £27K-£32K + bonus, flexitime, 35 hour week, South Warwickshire, West Midlands. System Tester, Test Analyst, Systems Tester. Large financial services company looking for proven Testers and Test Analysts. Do you have at least ... more >
United Kingdom | MI5 Security Service
Network and Systems Engineers Working for MI5 you will use your expertise to protect the UK from terrorism, espionage and other threats to national security. You'll be joining a team that provides essential technical analysis ... more >
Hove, United Kingdom | Brighton & Hove City Council
 Assistant Director / Head of ICT, c£75k plus relocation, Hove  Technology has a huge part to play in people's lives. It empowers them, supports them, sets them free and makes their lives easier in a million ... more >
Colindale (C1905), United Kingdom | NHS Blood and Transplant
 Operations Engineer, £28,313 - £37,326 pa plus High Cost Area Supplement, Colindale (C1905) About us The National Blood Service is an integral and vital part of the NHS. Our two million volunteer donors contribute 1.6 ... more >
More job opportunities