A Detailed Review Of A 3G Phone And Network 103
An anonymous reader writes "The NEC e606 and 3's recently launched 3G network has been reviewed at Mobileburn. They seem to be happy with the network, but the phone is buggy and unfinished. One cool thing is that you can download sample videos to see what 3G is really like."
Re:3G make for.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Hey instead of making phones with high speed networks can we make DSL/cable setups with high speed networks?
Or howabout not charge an arm and a leg for anything todo with a phone. E.g. changing an ESN shouldn't cost money!
That being said I'd certainly love the privilege of paying 0.30$/min to download 160x120 worth of crap at HIGHER speeds than I can [9600bps current or whatever CDMA is]. It's amazing reading websites on
Re:3G make for.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Tom
Re:3G make for.... (Score:1)
Re:3G make for.... (Score:1)
Re:3G make for.... (Score:1)
3G Rollout (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:3G Rollout (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:3G Rollout (Score:4, Insightful)
* The spectrum sales were done in years when money was no issue - unfortunately the dot com bust hit and suddenly the operators who had spent all their dough getting the spectrum had none left to actually build the infrastructure. (that's not to belittle the whole other issue of a seriously fragmented spectrum range here in the US where getting enough band to support 3G is pretty difficult for large operators - and almost impossible for new entrants)
* 3G is a major step ahead as far as the wired backhaul of the cellular infrastructure is concerned. With major companies (e.g. Lucent, Motorola) still cringing from the shock of vendor financing it's upto the operators (Sprint, Verizon et al) to buy the (expensive) upgrades themselves. In this climate today that's increasingly difficult - though there is some hope with people adopting intermediatry technologies. (I believe Verizon is moving ahead steadily on that one too).
But the fundamental questions remain: Do we really need 3G? What is the compelling reason? And will it be cost effective for end users or so overpriced that no one will be able to get it?
Obligatory (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Obligatory (Score:2)
It must be on an older 2 or 2.5G phone.
Poor coverage? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Poor coverage? (Score:3, Informative)
Sample Videos (Score:4, Informative)
I think it's funny that one needs to install another video player considering that the videos are supposed to be .MP4 files which should just play fine with Quicktime according to the Apple PR department [apple.com]... especially 3G phone files... strange... :-(
Re:Sample Videos (Score:2)
And anyway, don't they have logs where you work?
Re:Alternative report, examples (Score:2)
However, audio is still missing: Quicktime Player tells me it doesn't know the audio codec... still strange...
Re:Alternative report, examples (Score:1)
Most likely because the audio codec is AMR. Don't know if you can find an AMR codec for Quicktime.
Re:Sample Videos (Score:2)
The videos are 3GPP, which is based on mpeg-4 but is an entirely different standard.
Look in the box on the right side of that page.
"Add 3GPP capabilities to your player with the QuickTime 3GPP Component. Download Now [apple.com]"
java (Score:4, Insightful)
Its good to see phones supporting java, cell phones will be an increasingly crucial platform its good to see some openness.
Anyone have links to any development sites or places where 3rd party apps might be available. Ogg vorbis on a cell phone?
Re:java (Score:2, Informative)
Re:java (Score:1)
I use Ogg vorbis on my Sony Ericcson P800 all the time! See http://www.geocities.com/p800tools/ [geocities.com]
John
Ho hum (Score:2)
You could argue that the phone's other shortcomings (can't handle Bluetooth without an adapter; no spare battery slot in the charger) are just mistakes on this one project. But I think it says a lot about how totally screwed up the whole 3G thing is.
Reviewer forgot to mention heat. Device
3G speed (Score:1)
Re:3G speed (Score:2)
Re:3G speed (Score:2)
Due to my Sprint PCS experience, I have a terrible prejudice against any technology based on CDMA. And all the fun people in GSM-only countries have had with things like SMS prejudices me against any cell technology that doesn't aim to be universal. I guess I'm just immature.
Re:Ho hum (Score:1)
I'd be the first to agree that the 3G phones on the market today are little better than prototypes. They're bulky and use more power than GSM because they are, effectively, two phones inside: GSM and WCDMA (m
Re:Ho hum (Score:2)
If GSM networks are maxed out, does it really make sense to expand capacity using technology that requires more bandwidth? That is the big problem I have with 3G: there's only so much radio spectrum. Wireless streaming and multicasting may be ultrakewl, but I just don't see how millions of cell users can use this kind of application all at once.
The bit rate you report for GPRS is about what's claimed by pr
Re:Ho hum (Score:1)
You're right to identify spectrum as a scarce resource, and the 3G networks generally do try to make a better job of allocating it than current technologies - you should get about 3-5 times the number of voice conversations in the same spectrum as you would with a 2G technology. You could argue that that isn't a great improvement, but it's really the start of things - GSM networks have been optimised way beyond the exp
Re:Ho hum (Score:2)
You're right, 58kbs is plenty fast for a simple network applicatio
3G is all hype... (Score:5, Insightful)
The marketing people behind these products seem to have forgotten that the whole point of having a mobile phone is so that you can talk to people.
Why do I need video calling when audio calling works just as well at a fraction of the cost?
Why do I need picture messaging when text messaging (SMS) works just as well at a fraction of the cost?
Why do I need to be able to slowly download movie trailers, news and sports clips to watch on a tiny screen when I can watch those things on my TV or PC at a fraction of the cost?
Right now, with no decent applications, 3G is a joke. The only thing I've seen that even demonstrates a good use of this technology is doctors sending each other picture messages of patients' X-rays when looking for a second opinion. I guess it could be useful to other professionals too, such as estate agents, but for the price you pay to send a picture message right now you'd have to be mad to use it constantly like it was a digital camera.
If you've got money to burn then go ahead and buy one of these phones. But if you've got that much money to waste then you can send me some too at the same time.
Re:3G is all hype... (Score:5, Insightful)
Why do I need picture messaging when text messaging (SMS) works just as well at a fraction of the cost?
Why do I need television when radio works just as well at a fraction of the cost?
Why do I want a phone when a telegraph works just as well at a fraction of the cost?
Yes, things are expensive and buggy when they first hit the scene, but give them a few years and they will go down in cost and go up in reliability.
Personally, I think a video cellphone would be wonderful. Cellular is the perfect platform to introduce it to, since POTS tech is kinda at its limits.
Re:3G is all hype... (Score:2)
Why do I want a phone when a telegraph works just as well at a fraction of the cost?
Yes, things are expensive and buggy when they first hit the scene, but give them a few years and they will go down in cost and go up in reliability.
1. There's a world of difference between radio and television.
Would Orson Welles' War of the Worlds radio broadcast had as great an effect on the public if it had been on TV? Would it have foole
Re:3G is all hype... (Score:1)
The Idea is not to take two steps backward while attempting to take one step forward?
If you pay a penalty in terms of both COST and Functionality to get a feature that you will have little chance to use (because no one else has compatible equipment) then you will wait until it becomes more popular, cheaper, and does not penalize you in other areas (battery
Re:3G is all hype... (Score:1)
I wish the manufacturers would spend some time making mobile-phone gear that can tell us the difference between the other party's silence and a loss of signal. I'm sick of having to say, "can you hear me now?" over and over. Forget the 3G frills until you make basic moile telephony work better.
Mobile telephony service is already overpriced. I don't want to pay even more exorbitant monthly fees for Internet access and video, I just want my mobile phone to work reasonably!
Re:3G is all hype... (Score:2)
Obviously you don't have that ability. I just got a camera phone, and it is worth it (at $50 and a year contract - but I was planing on not switching providers soon anyway, greater cost might not be)
Now when I see the kid of someone my sister went to school with I can take a picture and show my sister. Every try describing what someone looks like? "He is soo cute, and he looks just like his daddy" - which is nice and all, but even if you know his daddy doesn't really tell you what he looks like. If I
Re:3G is all hype... (Score:1)
Did anyone notice (Score:2, Funny)
My executive summary (Score:3, Insightful)
So here is the question: who needs this phone and this 3G network? Am I alone in rejecting Web browsing on a tiny LCD, often paying per minute? Am I alone in treating this 3G propaganda as pure marketing that doesn't satisfy any real need that people have?
Re:My executive summary (Score:2)
Re:My executive summary (Score:2)
They are bending over backwards to sell these things and I'll deal with it for a year for those numbers.
Re:My executive summary (Score:1)
3G Distorts Gravity? (Score:4, Funny)
> Weighing in at 150g, the e606 is no lightweight,
> but it certainly didn't feel as heavy as other phones
> that weigh this much
Huh?
it's not complicated (Score:2)
Perhaps you've picked up objects before?
If not, just take my word for it.
video call for A830? (Score:1)
dream world (Score:2)
I have the sidekick (Score:3, Interesting)
Add to that the fact that I get 200 voice minutes, 1000 weekend minutes, no roaming (anywhere in my country), no long distance (anywhere in my country).
I also get unlimited GPRS data. Yeah, that's right. Last month I transferred 130MB of data.
Oh, yeah, of course, and I can roam onto any GSM/GPRS network in my country (there are three major ones) and not pay roaming. And, of course, I can also switch to a different phone and keep my SIM card. Or switch to a different provider and keep my phone.
All for about $40 per month.
I paid nothing for the phone, but I had to sign up for a year.
Any guesses where I live? It's the country with the first EDGE service. It's also the country with the most GSM towers.
It's the USA.
Re:I have the sidekick (Score:2)
What model of phone is it?
Re:I have the sidekick (Score:2)
Anyway,
It's a T-Mobile Color Sidekick. If you're in Europe, well, sorry - the Sidekick is a single band phone and won't work in Europe (different frequency). They are planning on introducing a tri-band model.
The Sidekick is actually a rebranded version of a device called the Hiptop from a company called Danger, Inc.
http://www.danger.com
I hear that the Nokia 3650 is quite nice as well, but that the ke
Re:I have the sidekick (Score:1)
That's quite a big, but important difference.
Re:I have the sidekick (Score:2)
The US is 3x the size of Western Europe, with roughhly the same number of people. So, it's not hard for us to have "the most GSM towers". Per capita, nearly every European country has far more than the US. The EU has far more towers as well.
Second,
Remember the size difference here. For reference, France is about 2/3 the size of Texas. Germany+France would fit nicely into Alaska, with room to spare.
Take, for example, Wyoming. Wyoming has 200,000 people in an area only marginally smaller than France. I
Re:I have the sidekick (Score:1)
So my question is this: If Cingular is currently using TDMA and transitioning to GSM, then why would they ALSO be adding WCDMA? I mean, isn't that 3 networks to support by the same company?
Here's a source of info on the transition from TDMA to GSM. There are other places where you will r
German article on the same subject (Score:1)
I love 3G data services! (Score:2)
I pay $10/month for Unlimited data usage, and it is well worth it.
I have been using this setup since November 2002. The coverage is excellent and the speed is awesome, except on Sunday evenings.
My average download speed is over 100kbits. If I use multisource downloading I can almost always pull 138+kbits with bursts up to 250kbits.
Supprisingly the upload is much faster than the download. Average upload sp
I have a handful of nails....... (Score:1)
All of these nails are going in the US 3G coffin...
One of them is voice quality, I have a "next gen" att phone, the voice quality sucks, I think I'll go back to old technology where I could understand the caller and get a signal in the middle of nowhere, or in a building in the middle of a city.
Another one is WiFi, why do I need data on my phone with so many WiFi hotspots, it doesn't make much sense, now if this next gen stuff worked in th
Wrong idea (Score:2)
Re:Wrong idea (Score:3, Insightful)
As for the PDA functionality, it's a logical next step, because virtually EVERYONE carries a mobile phone. If manufacturers want to sell us a PDA, it's going to have to have phone functionality otherwise we'll have to carry two gadgets.
Having said all that, my friend got one of these e606s and he's not been overwhelmingly i
Re:Wrong idea (Score:2)
Just the USA, as usual.
GPRS good enough for me (Score:2, Insightful)
COOL in Japan that phone is one year old! (Score:1)
Waiting for critical mass or killer app.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Alternativelly I'll buy one if my network (Orange) shuts down its 2G service or if a killer app is produced for the phones. I can't think what though.
The first phones are always going to be poor, in three years they'll be fa
I have recently switched to 3G. (Score:1)
I have sufferd enough from dis-compatiblity between PDC(Japan's 2G service) and GSM.
Just new FOMA card has justified cost of transer(approx $230), shorter battery life(40% of before), heavier terminal weight.
This phone sucks. (Score:1)
This phone had 2 good points: The Screen (its gorgeous) and The Keypad (really solid and positive).
Everything else about this phone is junk.
The user interface is almost impossible to figure out - as the reviewer says the thing is like some crazy puzzle with the Select button changing
on the premature aspect of the subject (Score:1)
Brick-city (Score:2)
This baby's huge - and I can easily view MP4's on my phone, admittedly not as fast while oline, but at that resolution...why?
Cellboost for your cellphone (Score:1)