iiNet adds Samsung tablets and camera to its offering
- 18 January, 2013 11:38
- Comments
iiNet has expanded its 3G range with two Samsung tablets and a camera.
The Samsung tablets include the 7 inch Galaxy Tab and the 10.1 inch Galaxy Tab.
iiNet is charging $13 per month for the 8GB Galaxy Tab 2 7.0 on a 24-month contract and $22 per month for the 16GB Galaxy Tan 2 10.1 on a 24-month contract.
The ISP is also offering the 3G 16.3 megapixel Samsung Galaxy camera, which can act as a mobile Wi-Fi hotspot for up to five other devices and instantly publish photos straight to Facebook and Instagram.
iiNet is selling the Samsung camera for $579 outright or $22 per month when bundled with a 3G mobile broadband plan on a 24-month contract.
3G mobile broadband plans at iiNet start at $19.95 per month for 4GB of data with a total minimum spend of $790.90 for the Galaxy Tab 2 7.0.
The total minimum spend for the Samsung Galaxy camera or the Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 on the 4GB 3G mobile broadband plan is $1006.80.
Follow Stephanie McDonald on Twitter: @stephmcdonald0
Follow Computerworld Australia on Twitter: @ComputerworldAU
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
Why change management doesn’t work
-
Larry Page wants to see your medical records
-
Dual-Persona Smartphones Not a BYOD Panacea
-
After two-year hiatus, EFF accepts bitcoin donations again
-
CIOs struggle to deliver timely mobile business apps: survey
-
NetApp FAS6240 Clustered SAN Champion of Champions
Storage systems today must match agility with diversified I/O performance to satisfy an enterprise’s changing needs. In their review, Silverton Consulting ranks the NetApp FAS6240 Clustered SAN, as an Enterprise OLTP “Champion of Champions.” Read the results of their benchmark testing and the features that impressed them the most. -
The Big Data Security Analytics Era is Here
Large organizations can no longer rely on preventive security systems, point security tools, manual processes, and hardened configurations to protect them from targeted attacks and advanced malware. Henceforth, security management must be based upon continuous monitoring and data analysis for up‐to-the‐minute situational awareness and rapid data-driven security decisions. This means that large organisations have entered the era of big data security analytics. Learn more. -
Mobile Load - Performance Testing for Mobile Applications
Key mobile trends and analysis on how performance testers must change their testing methodologies to ensure they are accounting for the changes caused by mobile usage. Download today.















