trentlythp
Well-known member
- Nov 1, 2010
- 55
- 4
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Well i have to say goodbye to Sprint. Guess im stuck paying more for better data, but to me that's well worth it
Sent from my Sprint Eptouch 4G
+1Meh sorry.
Assuming they ask for a reason for the return, please be sure to voice your complaint on the data speeds. It won't help you, but it may one day help another Sprint customer in your area.
Meh sorry.
Assuming they ask for a reason for the return, please be sure to voice your complaint on the data speeds. It won't help you, but it may one day help another Sprint customer in your area.
That article for Chicago doesn't even really mention Sprint, at least from what I read on my phone here. Are you saying it's been crap all along? Or?
I'm kind of torn on what to do. I absolutely love this phone but I agree that Sprint's data speeds are absolutely horrific. I can't even stream video half the time. What's the point of having a multimedia powerhouse if it's buffering every second?
My current speeds at 7PM on a Monday night are 180 - 190 kbps. Roughly 4-5 times faster than 56k dialup. Are you kidding me?
Two options that I'm thinking of. Return it (Sprint just downgraded the return period to 14 days so I would have to act fast), or hold on to it and wait for the AT&T version to come out.
Then of course I'll have a $350 early termination fee. But you know what, I can sell the phone on ebay and make at least $300 of that back.
It's really frustrating. I don't even know how Sprint remains in business with speeds this low.
Run this test instead:
- Go to performance.toast.net
- Choose the option to test using F-16 Fighting Jet.
- When it's done it will tell you how many seconds it took to download this 1MB picture.
- Post it here.
I don't trust the speed test app. It typically says I get about 300kbps down and 800kbps up. I would not be able to surf Android Central's site at those speeds.
This is what i got using your site. Downloading the fighter jet picture.
Sent from my Sprint Eptouch 4G
Run this test instead:
Network Vision is about taking the iDEN (800MHz), CDMA (1.9GHz), and WiMax (2.5GHz) towers and combining them into a single multi-mode tower with new backaul and radios. Clear claims LTE is mostly a software upgrade for them. If Sprint was planning on including WiMax (2.5GHz) on their multi-mode towers, I can't believe the *incremental* costs of LTE are that much more, especially considering Clear is saying LTE is mostly a software upgrade for their WiMax infrastructure.LTE is part of Network Vision, but it's the long-term part. Like Wimax, LTE requires a completely separate network infrastructure on different freqencies than CDMA and is hugely expensive to implement; AT&T and Verizon are spending upwards of a billon dollars per major metro market on their LTE deployments. Sprint doesn't have that kind of coin so plans to build out LTE in conjunction with partners Clearwire and Lightsquared, both of which have had various technical and/or financial problems. Long story short, it will take Sprint years to build out LTE.