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 1 edit | reply to kamm
Re: Competition is good said by kamm:said by iLive4Fusion:said by kamm:Ehh? ROFLMAO... you are aware that most smartphones are WAAAY ahead of the iPhone, right? FYI most Android phones are HSPA+ capable, up ~20Mb/s - soemthing that's unheard of in Apple['s world, I know. What phone's are? My Nexus One isn't.. Most are only up to 7.2.. If your using Android use the speedtest.net app. This is comedy golden...  You don't have the slightest clue about HSPA, right?  Read up on it: » en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Speed···t_AccessFYI your N1 is a HSPA+ phone, along with every other Snapdragon-based handset... Oh god. You have no clue about HSPA do you? The Nexus one is an HSPA 7.2 Phone. You must fail to realize the differences between HSPA+ and HSPA. I don't think there is a phone for T-Mobile that is capable of speed's higher than HSPA 7.2. BTW. I do know my stuff about cellular tech's. And citing Wiki show's how much you know.
And maybe before practically calling me an idiot, you should review the spec's and info of thing's first. »www.google.com/phone/static/en_U···ecs.html
Nexus one is ONLY capable of HSDPA 7.2 and HSUPA 2mbps.
The speedtest your using is very inaccurate and you need to use an actual APP.
BTW. There are several speed standard of HSPA all the way from 7.2 to 42. And Snapdragon has nothing to do with network speed's, network speed's have to do with the internal chipset. | | |
|  kamm join:2001-02-14 Brooklyn, NY 3 edits | said by iLive4Fusion: Oh god. You have no clue about HSPA do you? The Nexus one is an HSPA 7.2 Phone. You must fail to realize the differences between HSPA+ and HSPA. I don't think there is a phone for T-Mobile that is capable of speed's higher than HSPA 7.2. BTW. I do know my stuff about cellular tech's.
Ahahahahaha... oh yesss, you know "your stuff about cellular tech\'s" (sic!) Apparently your stuff equals almost nothing.  HSPA+ is HSPA with a speed upgrade (via MIMO) while, as all HSxA standards, remaining backward compatible - in other words you have absolutely zero clue about your OWN PHONE, pal. quote: And citing Wiki show's how much you know.
Nope, it shows where you should start your readings because you obviously don't know anything about cellular standards at ALL. quote: And maybe before practically calling me an idiot, you should review the spec's and info of thing's first. »www.google.com/phone/static/en_U···ecs.html
Nexus one is ONLY capable of HSDPA 7.2 and HSUPA 2mbps.
God...
...you are truly priceless!

Since you are unable to read my link here's a nugget for you: HSDPA + HSUPA = HSPA standard (of which a faster and upgraded version is called HSPA+ in case you are confused.) And no, speed differences are not standalone standards.
quote: The speedtest your using is very inaccurate and you need to use an actual APP.

WTF? Says who? Is this something that comes from your iKnowledge - "there's an app for that"?
Dude, you are embarrassing yourself pretty badly already, why don't you just stop posting your nonsense and read about these things first?
The mobilespeedtest.com site I'm using is rather more accurate than any retarded app - because it measures one thing and one thing only: X MB under Y seconds. That's it. No influence by local CPU or memory shortage or anything else.
Also it's been proven zillion times that all apps are WORTHLESS because no mobile network will peak up to 10+ megabit with a 500kB-1MB test.
quote: BTW. There are several speed standard of HSPA all the way from 7.2 to 42. And Snapdragon has nothing to do with network speed's, network speed's have to do with the internal chipset.

Snapdragon is a PLATFORM which INCLUDES THE RADIO CHIPSET...
...is there anything you fcukin know about this, seriously? --
said by bicker:Waaaa waaaa waaaa. You just want what you want and don't care to factor in what is right or true. Your perspectives are un-American, and deserve far more ridicule than I'm prepared to pile on them. | |  kamm join:2001-02-14 Brooklyn, NY 2 edits | reply to iLive4Fusion Since you are obviously unable to even use a search engine properly here's an original article from January:
quote: And the best thing about the HSPA+ upgrade is that its backward compatible, so that the T-Mobile 3G-enabled device being announced this week
its getting faster in 2010.
»www.eweek.com/c/a/Mobile-and-Wir···-855265/
About Snapdragon:
quote: The QSD8x50 platform consists of the QSD8250 which supports GSM, GPRS, EDGE, HSPA networks while the QSD8650 supports CDMA2000 1X, 1xEV-DORel 0/A/B, GSM, GPRS, EDGE and HSPA networks. Both chipsets include:
1 GHz CPU 600MHz DSP Integrated 3G mobile broadband Support for Wi-Fi® and Bluetooth® connectivity Built-in seventh-generation gpsOne® engine with Standalone-GPS and Assisted-GPS modes High-definition (720p) video decode, and multiple video codec support High-performance 3D graphics up to 22M triangles/sec and 133M 3D pixels/sec High-resolution up to WXGA (1280x720) display support 12-megapixel camera support Multiple audio codecs: (AAC+, eAAC+, AMR, FR, EFR, HR, WB-AMR, G.729a, G.711, AAC stereo encode) Support for mobile broadcast TV (MediaFLO, DVB-H and ISDB-T) Support for Windows Mobile®, Android, and a number of Linux®-based operating systems Qualcomms hybrid mode alternative solution
»www.qualcomm.com/products_servic···ml#specs
I hope we can conclude that you had little clue about the topic, you had absolutely no clue about your own HSPA/HSPA+ phone nor about HSPA vs HSPA+, the latter being inherently HSPA network and that you are sorry for spreading nonsense about my great results, right?  --
said by bicker:Waaaa waaaa waaaa. You just want what you want and don't care to factor in what is right or true. Your perspectives are un-American, and deserve far more ridicule than I'm prepared to pile on them. | |
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