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iPhone 3SG limitada a 384 Kbps la velocidad de subida

iPhone 3SG limitada a 384 Kbps la velocidad de subida

Posted July 9, 2009 at 12:36pm by iClarified
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El iPhone 3GS apoya 7.2Mbps conectividad, sin embargo, este tipo de velocidad no se obtiene si se trata de subir, según un informe MacWorld.

Macworld lector señala Nick Dunklee que derribar una rápida reparación en una de iPhone 3SG muestra que tiene un UMTS / HSDPA de chips. UMTS es la primera norma 3G desplegadas en redes GSM y tapas en 384 Kbps. Es fácil de probar, si tienes un iPhone 3GS. Vaya a cualquier velocidad probador, como prueba de mi iphone cuando estés al aire libre con una buena señal. Abajo, podría golpear así a más de 1 Mbps; aguas arriba, en 384 Kbps.

Lamentablemente, este limita la velocidad de subida de tu iPhone. Los que suben fotos y video regularmente no será capaz de aprovechar la mayor velocidad de red.


Su probable que Apple presentará este en un futuro modelo de iPhone como una 'nueva característica'.

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iPhone 3SG limitada a 384 Kbps la velocidad de subida
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Comments (8)
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Ppl
Ppl - July 10, 2009 at 3:55am
HSDPA is High Speed DOWNLINK Packet Access which gives you higher DOWNLOAD speeds while sending data tops at UMTS PS speeds - there is nothing special at apples products, since HSUPA [High Speed Uplink Packet Access] is hardly adopted by mobile vendors.
Enrico
Enrico - July 10, 2009 at 4:03am
Yes, but hardly worth the time to clarify considering the ignorant use of profanity from the original poster, hence I didn't bother to reply. Apple would never add HSUPA to the iPhone before it has been formally adopted and used in numbers by mobile networks -- especially since they are rolling out a new iPhone once a year. Adding (currently) near-useless hardware that would raise the overall price of the device would be silly & affect their competition with other smart phone devices. I'd be curious to know what (if any) competing products have already adopted HSUPA (that are currently shipping). Regards, -elc.
MZ
MZ - July 10, 2009 at 4:27am
I see where your coming from, but like I said there is a world outside America whos networks already support those faster download speeds, so it would not be adding a useless feature for the majority of iPhone users that live abroad. Plus Sprint and Verizons CDMA networks (i think thats what theyre called) and phones with those CDMA chips already support those downstream speeds (if om not mistaken). Saying that not including it in the 3Gs because a new phone is coming out in a year is exactly the reason we waited 2 years for copy/paste. Additionally, HAVING that feature WOULD make the iPhone more competitive against other phones, especially for the business/enterprise users
MZ
MZ - July 10, 2009 at 4:33am
"already support those faster *upload* speeds" "already support those *upstream* (if om not mistaken)" Sorry i miss-tryped...and i was referring to upload speeds in the original post...hence me talking abput upload video and streaming live vid from your phone
jonnikuest
jonnikuest - July 10, 2009 at 9:41am
and that my friend is what u miss. there are very FEW phone that support HSUPA and much less i dont think att, supports it on their network, seeing as they dont even have HSPDPA support setup yet. sprint nor verizon have high speed upload on their EV-DO network either. lets jump across the pond. only a few services support this. and after everything, apple is expected to have an LTE 4G based phone in its next iteration of the iphone. which will double the upload speeds of the overall network. also there are no live streaming apps in the app store. its not an API call that has supported in this latest SDK, giving access to live video. You Cant do it. so the only uploading u'd be doing on ur iphone comes from either ur 1-5 minute you tube videos, which upload just fine now, and any tethering u do, which, if u've ever used roadrunner, is right around the same 3-400Kbps upload stream. (actually i just tested my roadrunner turbo upload speed and i got about 650Kbps) big whoop! wheres the story? why should i be able to upload faster on my phone than my macbook pro? sheesh
Enrico
Enrico - July 10, 2009 at 7:52pm
Seriously, name *THREE* networks anywhere in the world that currently support HSUPA. I think this is a matter of "having to be right" and "never backing down" vs. being supported by any real facts.
Enrico
Enrico - July 10, 2009 at 7:54pm
...I should clarify by saying "supporting HSUPA with speeds above 384kbps).
MZ
MZ - July 10, 2009 at 8:23pm
Just off the top of my head Telstra's NextG network in Australia. Also Vodafone UK offers it. Im not gonna sit here and look up companies and see which ones offer that speed so google it https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HSUPA_networks
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