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Re: Coming to the United States?
Quote:
http://www.nokiausa.com/find-product...specifications http://www.gsmarena.com/nokia_n900-2917.php
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Sprint Evo
T-Mobile Nexus One ------------------------ Google is the next skynet |
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Re: Coming to the United States?
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Re: Coming to the United States?
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http://tinyurl.com/y8t7h44 http://forums.t-mobile.com/t5/Covera...PA/td-p/254526 Last edited by p-slim; 01-13-2010 at 04:49 PM. Reason: updated urls |
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Re: Coming to the United States?
Quote:
The talk about the MyTouch etc getting faster only means that they'll be able to max out their 7.2 connection easier than before. It doesn't mean that the phone's hardware will magically upgrade itself from a chip that only supports 7.2 to a different chip that supports 21. |
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Re: Coming to the United States?
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Re: Coming to the United States?
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See where it says: " Maximum speed PS 10/2 Mbps (DL/UL)"? That means it's HARDWARE is capable of 10mbps down. The relevant spec for the N1 and HD2 says 7.2mbps down. How is this still not clear to you? Hardware that says 7.2 max will never be able to do 21mbps, end of story. Let's just wait 2 months and see shall we? |
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Re: Coming to the United States?
Quote:
"T-Mobile is the first carrier to launch the even faster HSPA+ in the U.S. While other carriers talk about 4G plans and the promise of compatible devices, T-Mobile will speed ahead with HSPA+ deployments across the bulk of its 3G footprint in 2010, delivering 3-5 times the speeds of today’s 3G. And the best thing about the HSPA+ upgrade is that it’s backward compatible, so that T-Mobile myTouch 3G or another 3G-enabled device you bought in 2009…it’s getting faster in 2010." I hope you can understand plain english, those are not the limitations that you see on the website, those are the european limitations. Read this thread again. In plain english its says you will get faster in 2010 on ANY OTHER 3G ENABLED DEVICE PURCHASED IN 2009 OR LATER. http://forums.t-mobile.com/t5/Covera...PA/td-p/254526 |
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Re: Coming to the United States?
Quote:
Let me explain this "backwards compatibility" to you. Let's say you buy a laptop with a wireless a/b/g adapter and you connect it to your work's wi-fi, which is a G router. All is well and you're humming along at 54mbps. Now next year, your company upgrades the G router to an N router (which is capable of 108bps) and they assure you that this is router is backwards compatible with your old laptop. Do you think your laptop will suddenly be able to receive data at 108mbps? NO it will not. It will however, be able to internally max out it's 54mbps easier than before because of the fatter pipes so to speak. This is the EXACT SAME situation. Your company's router represents T-Mobile's current network and your laptop represents your phone. Just sit back and let those synapses fire and give those neurons a bit of a workout, you'll get there. |
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Re: Coming to the United States?
Maybe you both should read carefully what that T-Mobil Link states. It does lead you to believe that mytouch 3G etc.. is going to "get faster" (whatever that means).
Hardware is hardware, it can only support what is enabled for it to support. The T-Mobil link specifically says more than once the speed will be dependent upon the device. "With HSPA+, customers will experience network throughput speeds that are three to five times faster than today’s 3G networks – with theoretical peak download speeds of 21Mbps (depending on device and other factors)." Anyways, why the big argument? If this doesn't come to a head just email T Mobil and ask them? This isn't confidential information you can get a definite response. |
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Tags |
america, hd2, htc, united states |
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