Originally Posted by jonmorris:
“And even sending or receiving an email is painful when you have huge ping times and timeouts, due to congestion or just an incredibly slow backhaul. GPRS and EDGE might, in theory, be fine for a lot of people - but GPRS and EDGE rarely operates at anywhere near its full potential, often not working at all.”
Exactly, it doesn't matter what the air interface is, GPRS on EE (formerly T-Mobile) giving 56k speeds is better than GPRS on Voda or O2 giving no IP address, which is sadly very common. In my town centre this lunchtime (near Sainsburys front door) the EE signal was 4G 3 bars, and the Voda signal was EDGE on 5 bars and yet the Voda couldn't get an IP address to even check email status - I had to use the EE phone as a hotspot. This is not a congested area. I power cycled the phone to see if any 3G came up, but nope. This is a town of 50k people about 30 miles from LHR. Usually outdoors get Voda 3G, so perhaps they're doing upgrades for 4G and broken everything. In the office we've had to install SureSignal boxes all over the place just to get data to work and update calendar etc.
Quote:
“In the early days, one reason T-Mobile had good capacity (for 2G) was because of the huge demands on the network because of the free calls. I guess this meant that One2One had to install many more sites than it otherwise might have needed, which I suppose was a bonus when it came to upgrading to 3G. Yes, 1800MHz also required more cells - but it would have been a combination of both issues.”
Yes, Orange and T-mobile realised they needed essentially double the masts of 900mhz, so back in the prosperous 1990s they were able to build all these mast sites. That helped them both when 3G/UMTS came in at 2100mhz as they had physically more sites already live.
Quote:
“Like Three, it seems that T-Mobile really did work hard on rolling out 3G when others weren't in the same rush, and when MBNL came along - it really showed how far ahead it was over the competition that had become rather lazy and complacent. Or perhaps that's being too simplistic, and it was a case of Vodafone having interests in other areas.”
Voda knew what to do, but they just didn't do it in most places - either Chris Gent and co decided to invest overseas (Verizon Wireless shareholding etc) or they knew the income was mostly from corporate connections that only cared about voice and the 2G network was working well.
MBNL was a revelation when I moved from Orange to T-mobile in mid 2008, speeds just got better and better, as I replaced handsets to climb the various versions of HSPA/HSPA+ etc