This is the question than never ends ha ha.
Once again, it has nothing to do with how many bars or what the signal display is showing. The article does nothing to answer why so many people are having issues in marginal areas. Just read the forums, I'm far far from being alone in this. When I go to weak areas, a phone like the Rezound holds on to the signal better and ALSO shows very fast 4G speeds.
So this is not a case of 'holding on to a crappy 4G signal'. The signal that is being dropped by the Rezound is very good and very capable of great speeds as evidenced by the Rezound.
Oh non taken. Its more common sense really. Up until a certain point, granted im not sure of the exact logic, once the 4g signal gets low enough and 3g is stronger it will switch over. If you read the anandtech article it will make more sense. 3g draws less power and there fore saves on the battery drain.
Thats ur problem you think you know what is best for your phone over google engineers. What make you think that ur phone is better off battery wise holding that 4g over switching to 3g that draws way less.
Let me go grab some popcorn while you conjour up this response.
Im not sure what there is about that little 4g sign that gives you a hardon but you need to put it to rest eventually.
Once again, it has nothing to do with how many bars or what the signal display is showing. The article does nothing to answer why so many people are having issues in marginal areas. Just read the forums, I'm far far from being alone in this. When I go to weak areas, a phone like the Rezound holds on to the signal better and ALSO shows very fast 4G speeds.
So this is not a case of 'holding on to a crappy 4G signal'. The signal that is being dropped by the Rezound is very good and very capable of great speeds as evidenced by the Rezound.
If you notice most people yhat are complaining its because ?i want my wifis and 4g and gb's now now now? and they dont realize their phone is doing them a service by saving power. Instead they would rather complain that crappy htc and moto phones appear to give better service when all they do is give you a 4 hour paper weight.
You do nothing for your argument with statements like 'crappy htc and moto phones'. State facts and stick to the topic.
For me its nothing about the 4G sign that arouses me. Its the fact that I paid for a 4G device in a 4G market and I should have the right to decide when it uses that 4G and when it switches to 3G. Thats the whole reason I prefer Android to Apple. And again, this is all based on your assumption that the phone was designed to do this. There is no definitive proof of that.
Thats ur problem you think you know what is best for your phone over google engineers. What make you think that ur phone is better off battery wise holding that 4g over switching to 3g that draws way less.
Let me go grab some popcorn while you conjour up this response.
Im not sure what there is about that little 4g sign that gives you a hardon but you need to put it to rest eventually.
Honestly, and again I mean no offense by this, you can't assume something like this. Of the 5+ or so 4G LTE phones release by VZW, this is the only one "smart enough" to choose to save battery in low signal areas? The Bolt, with all its battery hogging glory didn't do it. If it is a "feature" then why didn't Verizon implement it on the first wave of LTE devices, when everyone complained about battery life?
I'm sorry but you can't assume that the device is designed to drop to 3G just because 4G signal is weaker at that moment. Unless Samsung/Google/VZW come out and say it, then it is just an assumption.
And just to combat the whole 3G using less power thing, if I am downloading a file in 3G, say a 100MB file, it will take something like 800 seconds (assuming 1 megabit per second 3G). Thats over 13 minutes. The same file with 4G at say 10 megabits per second (thats what I get when I have -98dbm) would take around 80 seconds. Thats a minute and twenty seconds. Now, logically speaking, in terms of battery saving, wouldn't you want the phone pulling a file from the network for 80 seconds as opposed to 800 seconds? The longer a device is pulling from the network, the faster the battery will drain. Just like being in a call. Talk time is less that standby time, always. You want to minimize your data time, in order to save battery.
This is like reading Geek Jerry Springer! You guys are totally entertaining me. Keep it up!![]()
Hahaha fun isnt it.
Just because it pulls great speeds doesnt mean its a good signal. You obviously dont know how tcp/ip connections work. But i see where you are getting at. All you care about is the mbps and that makes you happy, who cares about battery life, right?
Glad you arent an engineer logic has gone way over your head. You should leave thst to the engineers, oh, like me, thanks!
State facts. You havent stated one fact in any of your posts. Everything you spew out is opinionated.
State facts. You havent stated one fact in any of your posts. Everything you spew out is opinionated.
Honestly, and again I mean no offense by this, you can't assume something like this. Of the 5+ or so 4G LTE phones release by VZW, this is the only one "smart enough" to choose to save battery in low signal areas? The Bolt, with all its battery hogging glory didn't do it. If it is a "feature" then why didn't Verizon implement it on the first wave of LTE devices, when everyone complained about battery life?
I'm sorry but you can't assume that the device is designed to drop to 3G just because 4G signal is weaker at that moment. Unless Samsung/Google/VZW come out and say it, then it is just an assumption.
And just to combat the whole 3G using less power thing, if I am downloading a file in 3G, say a 100MB file, it will take something like 800 seconds (assuming 1 megabit per second 3G). Thats over 13 minutes. The same file with 4G at say 10 megabits per second (thats what I get when I have -98dbm) would take around 80 seconds. Thats a minute and twenty seconds. Now, logically speaking, in terms of battery saving, wouldn't you want the phone pulling a file from the network for 80 seconds as opposed to 800 seconds? The longer a device is pulling from the network, the faster the battery will drain. Just like being in a call. Talk time is less that standby time, always. You want to minimize your data time, in order to save battery.
Stating that I can't get 4G in a marginal area where 2 other phones I owned could, is not opinion, it's fact.