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What's the Problem With iPhone 3G Reception?

CWmike writes "Apple's iPhone 3G was just a couple of days old when reports began trickling onto the company's support forum from dissatisfied customers complaining about poor reception. Although no one outside of Apple and AT&T — and maybe a chipmaker or two — really knows, that has not kept others from speculating, or in a few cases, making claims based on unnamed sources. What's going on? We may not have all the answers, but we do have questions. Gregg Keizer put together everything we know in a FAQ on the griping about iPhone 3G reception."

7 of 322 comments (clear)

  1. Wide-spread discussion. by Z00L00K · · Score: 4, Informative

    And there is an article (auto-translated article in link) in the Swedish magazine Ny Teknik (New Tehcnology) about this too.

    So it's a problem that is well discussed these days.

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    1. Re:Wide-spread discussion. by ozmanjusri · · Score: 3, Informative
      I wonder whose radio it uses ?

      Infineon.

      But the problem may lie with the way Apple's software uses the radio.

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  2. For what it's worth...I tried one and returned it. by Ritz_Just_Ritz · · Score: 4, Informative

    I live in a relatively rural area, but close enough to a large city that I can get 3G service at home. I was (and returned to) using a Samsung BlackjackII. I was able to use it without any issues at all and got 3G and EDGE service at and near my home. When I brought the new iphone home, I was unable to get anything other than a standard connection (no EDGE and no 3G) and sometimes I couldn't even get a reliable enough signal to make simple phone calls. After a few days of frustration, I returned it to the store and went back to the BlackjackII.

    Just another datapoint.

  3. Re:Not new to iPhone by frglrock · · Score: 3, Informative

    From what I have read, this is a global problem. So no, it has nothing to do with AT&T (or any other phone company) and everything to do with the iPhone.

  4. The answer is simple by JamesP · · Score: 5, Informative

    Infineon chips. (ex-Siemens)

    I had the displeasure of working with products from this company, it is as fun as having a fork stuck in your eye.

    Crappy documentation, flaky concepts, incompatible versions, etc.

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  5. Re:"I love the phont, but..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    as an iphone owner, I can say, yes it is OK to NOT love the phone. I don't care what they say, the iphone is a half-assed phone, a half-assed media player and a half assed-pda. It gets NONE of those functions right. It has a wonderful browser, and that it it.

    I carry one because I got tired of carrying 3 devices, so I settled for a single device that has one good feature and the rest is crap. I previous carried a Zen Vision:M, nice interface, 30GB, 4 hours video, 15 hours audio and it played everything I threw at it, not I have a player that gets about 1.5 hours video, and about 8-10 hours audio, plays 2 formats of audio (mp3 and aac) and plays 2 formats of video. I previously had a PDA that was open enough to allow me to install what I wanted on it with thousands of pieces of software available. My Toshibe e805 was higher resolution, and could act as a USB host to add a mouse and keyboard if I wanted, it could even, with a $20 adapter output to a VGA monitor to allow for powerpoint presentations. It wasn't 3G, but I previously carried a Nokia 6126, which is probably one of their best flip phones.

    I DID love those devices, they were all fantastic devices that did their jobs very well. I will not buy another iphone, I will go back to 3 devices when this one dies, and considering the battery problems I am starting to have as I approach the 1 year mark, that is probably going to happen soon. I will miss the great browser on the iphone, but in all honesty, that is the only thing I will miss about the iphone.

  6. Re:With the fees that Rogers charges in Canada by snowraver1 · · Score: 3, Informative

    No. One cannot profit while using a cell phone in Canada. They make sure that you pay so much that the only one turning a profit is Bell/Telus/Rogers.

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