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T-Mobile G1 Faster Than iPhone 3G

An anonymous reader writes "CNET UK have run some very simple in-house tests comparing the T-Mobile G1's 3G connection against the iPhone 3G's. Result? The G1 loaded Web pages almost twice as fast as the iPhone's. Of course, the test only applies to the CNET UK offices if you're being scientific about it, as stated, but it's still impressive nevertheless."

14 of 304 comments (clear)

  1. Re:somebody read it by BobMcD · · Score: 5, Informative

    3 and 4, per the conclusions of the author.

    Don't worry, though, I'm sure some apple fan will be along shortly to debunk it.

  2. Re:somebody read it by dnwq · · Score: 4, Informative
    From TFA:

    Taking into account that we tested it against another 3G phone with a T-Mobile SIM in it, we believe that it's not a network factor, it's the G1's browser and processor being able to render pages much faster. So if you're looking for a fast Web experience on the go, we strongly recommend checking out the T-Mobile G1.

  3. Re:How would it fare elsewhere? by multipartmixed · · Score: 3, Informative

    Look in the top left-hand corner(ish). If it says "3G", you have a 3G connection. If it says "E", you have Edge. Edge is roughly dialup. It works, but it's slower'n'piss.

    I have a Rogers iPhone, I live in a rural area, and get 3G on one side of my house and Edge on the other. The difference is astounding.

    --

    Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
  4. I actually quite like the trackball by grahamsz · · Score: 5, Informative

    I didn't think i would, but it's a nice touch.

    Still by the time it's got a keyboard, a touch screen, some buttons and a trackball... it feels like it's perhaps over doing it.

    Do you think it's ugly in person? Like my last HTC device, it's much nicer in your hand than in pictures.

    The integration between the phone and third party apps is wonderful.

    When a call comes in that isn't in my phone book, the whitepages app does a reverse number lookup and shows that on screen.

    I can use shazam to identify music and then go straight to youtube or the amazon mp3 store to buy or listen to it.

    I can scan the barcode of a book, compare the prices at online stores and it'll tell me which local booksellers have it and give me driving directions to the store (although it only seems to work for b&n)

    Of course that's all mostly android and not the device.

    1. Re:I actually quite like the trackball by JCSoRocks · · Score: 4, Informative

      You've just given more useful information about the phone than I've found in all the billions of hypefest articles on the 'net. It actually sounds really appealing now.

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    2. Re:I actually quite like the trackball by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 3, Informative

      The music comes from wherever you are - watching TV, on a bus, sitting next to some guy in his car who is playing his stereo too loudly, whatever. Shazam identifies music in your environment that you record. Pretty neat, really.

    3. Re:I actually quite like the trackball by grahamsz · · Score: 4, Informative

      It records it from whatever radio station, coffee shop or party that it's being played at. It then analyzes the audio and identifies the band.

      However rather than leaving you with a song id, you can buy it on amazon and download straight to your phones music library or you can hop over to youtube and find the video for that song.

      I get my music from a mix of sources, sorry for not towing the slashdot corporate boycott line.

  5. T-Mobile in NYC by C_Kode · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've been with T-Mobile since they were Voice Stream back in 2000 when I was living in Dallas. In Dallas they were great, but I've been in NYC since early 2005 and their service sucks in this area. Most of the time my Internet access doesn't work at all.

  6. Simply... awesome. by s13g3 · · Score: 4, Informative

    My room mate, a senior T-Mobile Engineer, did a test just last night of his new G1 on T-Mo's 3G network versus his iPhone on AT&T's network and saw a full 150kbps difference between the two, with advantage going to the G1. On a later test they ran the G1 against the iPhone with both on T-Mobile's network and saw between a 50 - 75kbps difference between the two, again, advantage G1.

    So far I'm rather impressed with the device. The trackball is very functional, easy to use, and seems well made. The device is fast and responsive, and while the screen may not be quit as big or pretty as the iPhone's, it's still plenty nice enough. Ok, it doesn't have multi-touch (as far as I can ascertain), but it's fast, very functional and I really really want one now. Web-browsing was a wonderful experience (first time I can say that about a phone), and did I say it was fast? Also the native console and SSH functionality was awesome, and I was very surprised by how well it represented my SSH sessions, including irssi - I must have one.

    It really does look better in the hand than it does on photos. Ok, not quite as slick as the iPhone, but I'm also not one of those people who will shell out an extra $X just to get a pretty PC case when all I want is functionality - I don't need my mobile device to be sexy in an artistic way, I want it to be sexy in a functional, useful and powerful way. The teenage emo girls on 4chan can have the iPhone, it's G1 for me.

    Don't forget open standards for the phone too, and the fact that with the time and effort you can make it do anything you want to, and not have to be beholden to what Apple thinks you should be able to do, or a glorified pager that is the Blackberry.

    --
    "Inveniemus Viam Aut Faciemus" 'We will find a way... Or we will make one!' --Hannibal of Carthage
  7. Re:somebody read it by grahamsz · · Score: 4, Informative

    o2 has 3g coverage for 80% of the country. I find it very hard to believe that the skipped "London" when they were doing that.

    T-Mobile UK is delivering a 7.2Mbps connection whereas O2 are still at 3.6Mbps - either way i find it hard to believe that download speed is a major issue.

    Quite why they didn't use wifi - i dont know

  8. Re:How would it fare elsewhere? by Teilo · · Score: 3, Informative

    Edge is roughly dialup.

    BZZZZT! Wrong.

    GPRS (2G) is roughly dialup. EDGE (2.5G) is more like slow DSL, in the 128K to 230K range. GPRS can actually do better than dial-up. It maxes out at 59K.

    The G1 does all three, and it distinguishes between them on the display. Perhaps your iPhone doesn't.

    --
    Mir tut es leid, Menschen daß Einfältigfehlersuchenbaumfolgendenaffen sind.
  9. Re:Chrome vs Safari by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Informative

    They're both based on WebKit, but there are some huge differences between the two WebKit branches. They have different JavaScript implementations, and they have completely different code in the platform-dependent layer. This layer is responsible for, among other things, network connections, URL parsing / handling, text glyph loading, and drawing.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  10. Re:Not sure about the US... by PeterChenoweth · · Score: 3, Informative
    Why did you call AT&T? In an attempt to get the old $20/month data plan? Because it's trivial to disable 3G on the 3G iPhone....

    Settings->General->Network

    Where it says, "Enable 3G" slide the switch to "Off"

    Problem solved.

  11. CNET's Update Negates Their Findings - Phones Same by laoudji · · Score: 3, Informative

    Turns out it's an O2 network issue: From TA: "Update: A previously published version of this article concluded that the G1's browser and processor were able to render pages faster than the iPhone's. In response to reader comments regarding a Wi-Fi test, we have now run a set of tests and concluded that, indeed, both phones load pages at a similar speed over Wi-Fi. This means there's little difference in processor or browser performance. Clearly the G1 is a superior Web phone to the Omnia, but it seems to be O2's network that is holding the iPhone back."