The Following User Says Thank You to Laughingstok For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-01-19
, 21:46
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Posts: 271 |
Thanked: 220 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#32
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The Following User Says Thank You to texaslabrat For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-01-19
, 21:46
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Posts: 117 |
Thanked: 44 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#33
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T-Mobile had a 7Mb network in Philly, before the rest of their 3G areas across the country...why couldn't AT&T also have a "test network"? They are also performing 3G upgrades.
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2010-01-19
, 21:49
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Posts: 117 |
Thanked: 44 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#34
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2010-01-19
, 21:50
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Posts: 518 |
Thanked: 160 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#35
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Because they have a network and frequency bandwidth already which they would not go out of since frequency bandwith are licensed AFAIK.
If they are performing 3G upgrades they would upgrade the network which *all* of their products use and not something which probably only their rival operator has.
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2010-01-19
, 21:54
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Posts: 117 |
Thanked: 44 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#36
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You are missing my point. I was responding to the comment that if a town in Nevada is seeing higher data speeds, that everyone else in the country, on AT&T would also see them...I'm saying that it is not necessarily true, as AT&T could have increased speeds on an isolated basis, as with T-Mobile.
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2010-01-19
, 21:59
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Posts: 518 |
Thanked: 160 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#37
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I am getting your point, however you dont seem to understand the technical issue here.
1. N900 does not officiallly support the frequency bands used by ATT for 3G.
2. ATT would not (i think) upgrade their network to include a rivals frequency band which is not used on *any* of their own products/phones.
which would point to the conclusion that, even though the town in Nevada is seeing an upgrade in network (congrats to ATT for that) it should/would not reflect on a N900.
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2010-01-19
, 22:03
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Posts: 117 |
Thanked: 44 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#38
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Well "again", I only posed the possibility that an upgrade could have created an "anomaly" focing the higher rates (i.e. 3.5G, which is something AT&T previously did not have?).
And "again", even excluding the 900, its very possible that a local market could see higher rates where others would not. Try not to merge the (2) different topics.
so i was downtown at the court house and i was playing music then i hear the sound of msn and skype connect so im like wtf then i look and it says 3G/3.5 -_- i thought this phone dont support 3G on ATT? -_- im back at home now and its back to 2.5G now ;; wth
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2010-01-19
, 22:12
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Posts: 518 |
Thanked: 160 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#39
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2010-01-19
, 22:17
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Posts: 11,700 |
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Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#40
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If you don't know how to check your N900's uptime, you probably shouldn't own it.