Actually, you case could not be more convoluted. In fact, I am still trying to determine what your point was and how is it relevant to this topic. And what are you even talking about with "as cities get LTE for the first time next year and in 2013"? LTE already has 110+ million people covered in more than 50 cities... so what are you talking about that LTE will hit cities for the FIRST time next year? And do you even know what "better chip implementation" means?
Whatever your point was, the only thing I took from it was that you rest your case WAY too much, mate. You'll go blind doing that.
My point:
The Qualcomm MDM9600 LTE hardware was originally used in the scrapped version of the 4.3" Bionic. It for some reason had a serious problem playing nice with Nvidia's Tegra 2 dual-core processor. I have talked about this before. I do not know if it is in the update version of the 4.5" Bionic, or if said version has a Tegra 2.
The Tegra 2 seems to work fine in other 3G devices, and Samsung has a dual-core processor in the Galaxy Tab 10.1 because they use their own LTE radio hardware, not Qualcomm's. Well, that humble MDM9600 seems to be quite the troublemaker wouldn't you say?
So now explain to me how it is HTC's bad that Qualcomm doesn't play well with others? HTC didn't make the hardware... they just put it in the phone. They didn't realize how nasty the MDM9600 was until that OTA update was out.
The point of this thread was to help determine the parameters that cause power cycling, not who is to blame. I have stated over and over what the problem was. It is the protocol by which the radio communicates with the phone, as well as the way to which the radio positions that protocol. That helps nothing. Getting the phone fixed is finding the piece of incorrect coding that is the true cause. We think we have found it, but I suppose that we will find out in about two weeks.
Point is:
HTC is not at fault.
Google is not at fault.
Qualcomm is the culprit.
Verizon is at fault by association.
A fix is almost here.
See how clear that was? And I did not utter that four word phrase that you seem to overuse.
That was a very informative explanation, and please understand that I'm not trying to question your knowledge. I'm merely trying to expand my knowledge of these devices and the LTE technology. If I understood you correctly, the Qualcomm LTE chip is at fault? How then can anyone explain why only some devices are subject to the rebooting problem, both before and/or after the MR1 OTA update, if they all have the same QUalcomm "problem child" onboard?