  anonRRRR
@rr.com
from: rec9140 
| Should have used... EVDO from either Verizon Wireless or Sprint PCS. Their high-speed EVDO Rev.A networks are faster then what AT&T and T-Mobile have for their HSDPA networks. | |
|  |  |  |  |   S_engineer
join:2007-05-16 Chicago, IL
| Re: Should have used... It also carries 802.11/n on a Win XP platform, sounds alright. I build my own PCs using Asus mobo s, I wonder how their laptops are if this is a draft N integrated card? -- The "Lifetime" channel is responsible for 83% of all divorces...Robert Ginty | |
|  |  |   NOCMan Verizon Fios User Premium join:2004-09-30 Flower Mound, TX | There are over 100 Million CDMA subscribers in the US..
Forget a few 0's or is that just Canadians  | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   kamm
join:2001-02-14 Brooklyn, NY
·Packet8
| Re: Should have used... said by rec9140 : said by en102 : ASUS is probably thinking global rather than U.S. only. GSM based networks have ~ 3.3 billion subs vs 465 million CDMA. UMTS/WCDMA networks have more potential. Stats sources = »www.cdg.org/technology/cdma_tech···tats.asp and www.gsmworld.com
Then Asus should either: 1) Create a EVDO model 2) Create a hsdpa model 3) Use a dual mode chip set that You can either cut off sales by going single mode or account for it in the least cost method, dual mode chipset(s). Or Asus just leave it as it is, GSM-only, concentrating on the 3.2B-strong market instead of wasting a single cent on a 100M US and an additional ~300M worldwide (fractured in smaller markets) user market...
... if I were Asus, I would stick with GSM and UMTS and forget CDMA. -- [BQUOTE=[user=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. [/BQUOTE] | |
|  |  |  |  |   rec9140 Provoice just DO it
join:2003-07-29 Mulberry, FL
·RoadRunner Cable
| Re: Should have used... said by kamm : Or Asus just leave it as it is, GSM-only, concentrating on the 3.2B-strong market instead of wasting a single cent on a 100M US and an additional ~300M worldwide (fractured in smaller markets) user market...
Well all 3.2B are NOT on UMTS/HSDPA are they? Not all GSM carriers have converted to 100% UMTS.....
So your potential is the UMTS/HSDPA SUBSET of those 3.2B users and the subset of data users in the US.
Those numbers will be a lot smaller than 3.2B. There maybe 3.2B GSM and UMTS users. Doesn't make it the better protocol from a technical standpoint. GSM is a dud protocol that has roots of a very non technical nature for its adoption.
Asus can sell to 100% of the market, or lop 50-60% of potential customers off by ignoring the US market and its mixed network environment. Like it or not selling products in the US is what makes companies A LOT OF $$$$ and $$$ is what makes it work. Can some products/companies not sell in the US and still make a profit and succeed?? SURE. The netbook arena will not be one of them.
US consumers and business make a up a large portion of the chunk of potential buyers and ignoring any one factor of them could have potentially deadly effects on your product.
Any product that would be sold as GSM/UMTS only product would be dead for most of the situations I deal with as 100% of them deal only with VZW, Sprint, Alltel, US Cellular .... all 100% CDMA. NOT ONE, ZERO, none, will touch ATT or TMobile. Suggesting to even use another would get you escorted out quite quickly.
Netbooks are on the evaluation table right now.... Any vendor not able to provide a EVDO based netbook, eliminated..... Suggesting to change to one of the HDSPA carriers ATT or TMobile.... career suicide. The ability to replace $1500-3000 laptops with a $400 netbook for what in all purpose is nothing but a terminal on the network???? I am think of some very specific applications that netbooks will fit into quite nicely for me and the savings potential is huge.
The network, plain and simple. Coverage, coverage, coverage. Then reliable, reliable, reliable. Reliable and Coverage??? VZW. Followed by the regional CDMA's and then lastly Sprint.
Show up to a gun fight with a plastic knife and you won't last long.
UMTS coverage in the US is pathetic either between the poor carrier ATT or lack of coverage TMobile.
Would I like to see one standard worldwide. Sure BUT I want a standard thats selected based on its actual performance and not 1930's isolationist and anti US BS. If Ericcson wants to come up with something that can step up to the RF table and show its merits ala [W]CDMA bring it on!
Personally I am not a fan of LTE which VZW is moving towards for 4G. It has some of the same baggage of GSM due to Voda, but from a technical standpoint has merits as well.
said by kamm :
... if I were Asus, I would stick with GSM and UMTS and forget CDMA.
If they use UMTS it WCDMA. Those 3.2B users once converted to UMTS will be in the CDMA column soon. GSM/EDGE is toast... -- Ban all copyright, trademarks, and IP laws!//Lorem ipsum ei pro stet equidem labores, at enim animal expetenda nec. Ea vix argumentum dissentiunt, usu esse ridens ex. | |
|  |   ninjatutle You can keep the "change"
join:2006-01-02 San Ramon, CA
·AT&T U-Verse
edit: September 25th, @02:39PM
| I wouldn't want Sprint for an embedded service provider. They don't use sim cards. The business focused customer wouldn't have this as their main portable unit. Just as a supplementary unit. As with other devices with built in HSDPA, you can pop out the card and use it on your other device. With Sprint, (don't know about Verizon) you are tied, no sims. | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  iansltx
join:2007-02-19 Fredericksburg, TX | Verizon is the same way. But why not use Qualcomm's Gobi solution. It'll do both CDMA and GSM. From my experience, CDMA feels faster, at least where I've been with it. | |
|  |   kamm
join:2001-02-14 Brooklyn, NY
·Packet8
| said by anonRRRR :
EVDO from either Verizon Wireless or Sprint PCS. Their high-speed EVDO Rev.A networks are faster then what AT&T and T-Mobile have for their HSDPA networks. ROFLMAO - this has to be news for the rest of the HDSPA/HSUPA world, using their 7Mbit networks... -- [BQUOTE=[user=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. [/BQUOTE] | |
|  |  |  EPS
join:2008-02-13 Hingham, MA | Re: Should have used... And as neither at&t or T-Mobile are currently offering 7Mbit HSDPA in the US, I don't see how that's relevant... (T-Mobile might be offering those kinds of speeds in Europe, I don't know) | |
|  |  EPS
join:2008-02-13 Hingham, MA | The problem with EVDO is the built-in carrier lock- though maybe Asus and VZW or Sprint could get together and come up with a deal to sell EV-DO equipped Eees in the carrier's stores... | |
|  |  |   sabersaw Premium join:2001-08-21 Dayton, OH | Re: great little guy They are neat.. nice bedside laptop. Also, the solid state HD is a taste of what is to come in the future. People have been modding these since day one with different carriers mobile cards. | |
|  |  |  stufried Premium join:2003-10-13 | Re: great little guy The flexibility of HSPA is very attractive. The ability to buy a prepaid SIM card for the country de jour sounds very appealing. | |
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