Well what verison doesnt tell you in their commercials is that At&t's overall coverage is still better than verison's....for example, they only show 3G, not edge also.
it says 3G at the bottom of the map...
Well what verison doesnt tell you in their commercials is that At&t's overall coverage is still better than verison's....for example, they only show 3G, not edge also.
I WANT TO KNOW PEOPLE WHO HAVE AT&T, receive any 3G reception in Montana? Wyoming? New Mexico? South and North Dakota, Idaho,Nebraska, and Alaska?![]()
Here's a thought on the ads...
I recently took an amtrak from Jackson, MS, to Chicago, IL. Along the way, I had a range of receptions on my iPhone. 3G, Edge... lots of dropped calls. Many periods of No Service. Fun time to have phone conversations.
Meanwhile, a guy in front of me was watching Netflix on his computer with the Verizon MiFi. No probems.
phone calls and data are different. and it's a known issue with GSM that when you're moving to that you will drop a call since the handover from one tower to another doesn't work very well.
data is buffered so if you change towers you won't notice it because it has time to acquire another tower
Whatever discussion you read was incorrect.
The commercial only includes EVDO Rev A coverage on the VZW 3G map.
Sorry guys i apparently forgot there is no 3G coverage in freaking las vegas! I mean are you kidding me. if AT&T has no 3G coverage in las vegas i will throw my iphone off a cliff, pictures included![]()
No it doesn't. The current version of Verizon's comparison map explicitly states that for Verizon the criterion for inclusion in the map is EV-DO; for AT&T it is HSPA; for Sprint it is EV-DO; for T-Mobile it is HSPA.in the small print it says verizon's definition of 3G is 600kbps.
in the small print it says verizon's definition of 3G is 600kbps. EDGE qualifies as 3G since the first 3G networks were deployed almost 10 years ago.
AT&T has HSPA deployed almost everywhere and i get almost 3Mbps in NYC during off-peak hours and close to verizon's maximum speed of 1.4Mbps during peak hours
in the small print it says verizon's definition of 3G is 600kbps. EDGE qualifies as 3G since the first 3G networks were deployed almost 10 years ago.
AT&T has HSPA deployed almost everywhere and i get almost 3Mbps in NYC during off-peak hours and close to verizon's maximum speed of 1.4Mbps during peak hours
The United Nation's ITU committee originally classified EDGE as 3G back around 2000 because it had a theoretical max over 600Kbps. Later they admitted in a white paper on their website that it was a mistake to lump it in with others, because in real life it max'd at ~360Kbps.
Plus no other group on the planet calls EDGE "3G". Not even AT&T, in their maps, their website, nor in their lawsuits.
Yep, AT&T is increasing their backhaul to go along with HSPA and it's going to be a great and long-awaited improvement.
FYI, Verizon's max speed is 3.1 Mbps.
After seeing the "there's a map for that" commercial a few times, I want to know how peoples 3G coverage is to see how to true the map is. Based on the map, I can already tell you the 3G coverage from Los Angeles to Phoenix, AZ is false. I have 3G coverage all the way there and back
Post if your 3G coverage isn't "blue" on the map, name location too if need be
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I recently, in October drove from Everett, Wa to Columbus, OH and always had 3 to 5 bars, never dropped a call even through the mountains. So I think Verizons ads are lies. What say you?