I have been on all of the carriers in 2yrs and have experienced plenty of devices that's well known in android land.
Let's see, less than 12 months ago you had a "legendary" Evo 3D on Sprint that you said would be a "flagship device well into 2012". Then, for no more than
3 weeks you had a SGS2II Skyrocket on AT&T, less than the 30 day return window. I wouldn't call that "owning" a phone, more like renting or leasing, if even that much. After that you had a LG Revolution on Verizon, again for no more than 3 weeks, for which you traded in a Galaxy Nexus. Now you're on T-Mobile with a SGSIII. I state all this hum-drum because, as quoted above, you say you've been on "
all of the carriers". So where's Cricket, Virgin Mobile, Metro PCS, Boost Mobile, US Cellular, Simple Mobile, and all the other carriers that fall under that "all" category? They are indeed carriers, after all. You have no clue what you speak of.
but the problem with it's shinny new Lte network is that NONE of their devices work the same on the same network.. Why is that.
Hmmm, as I've stated many times when you asked this stupidly simplistic question, maybe it's because an HTC phone has different radio hardware than a Samsung phone. Maybe it's because a Samsung phone has different radio hardware than a Motorola phone. Maybe it's because an LG phone has different radio hardware than an HTC phone. The list goes on. Surely you don't think
every single phone from the myriad of different manufacturers would perform
exactly the same on the same network? If that's what you're looking for, get the iPhone you so despise. That's the only way to have a consistent experience.
Additionally, some phones have problems that other phones of the exact same kind don't have. Some Galaxy Nexus owners in the UK initially reported on the issue where putting another cell phone next to a certain spot on the GN would cause hardware buttons to be triggered without them ever being physically pushed. This affected a few users, not all.
Plus we won't even get into the CDMA vs HSPA/GSM difference
Which is why your comparison of signal from Verizon to T-Mobile is utterly pointless and moot. Congratulations. You've just proved me right.
Edited by moderator.