After the experiences with such a variety of mobile phones over the last few months I decided to create a dedicated site with information and real life consumer reviews of various mobile phones.
Mobile Phone Reviews - iPhone, Nokia, Orange
The site has reviews of the Apple iPhone 3Gs and Nokia E71 phones along with other information from this blog.
Review of the HTC Wildfire on 3 Network
Musings, tips and hints about computing, mobile phones and general technology comments. Help and advice about the latest virus and malware as well as ways to avoid Trojans that will steal your online banking details. As soon as we spot a new scam/virus email then we post it here to warn others about them.
Showing posts with label iPhone 3GS Comparison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone 3GS Comparison. Show all posts
Tuesday, 16 February 2010
Monday, 4 January 2010
iPhone 3GS Comparison - Orange compared to O2 for signal and reception problems
The iPhone saga continues! I have now had my O2 iPhone 3GS for 3 days and am finding some rather interesting differences between the Orange iPhone and O2 iPhone; I have also been able to check signal strength for the iPhone and standard handset on O2.
1) O2 seems to use a different algorithm for switching between 2G and 3G compared to Orange. I found with Orange that the iPhone 3GS would try to maintain a 3G signal for as long as possible even if it dropped to 1 bar. The O2 version seems to be rather different and mainly appears to be sticking to the 2G GPRS network that has full coverage even if a low 3G signal exists. 3G signal only tends to appear if it is 4 or 5 bars strength. It is possible that this is a design consequence of O2 having lower claimed 3G coverage than Orange.
2) Battery seems to be used much faster on iPhone O2 than Orange. An 8 hour day connected to 2G (GPRS) took the battery from 100% down to 20%. This didn't happen with Orange iPhone which implies it either has better power management unless the O2 iPhone possibly has a faulty battery.
3) Testing the O2 Sim in a standard Nokia handset showed that a 3 bar 3G signal existed at the testing location. When the O2 sim was replaced in the iPhone it showed only 1 bar and immediately switched to GPRS 2G network. This would tend to backup other reports across the internet that show the iPhone doesn't hold a mobile signal as well as other phones.
4) You cannot receive calls when your iPhone is connected to the 2G network using the internet - the call will go straight to voicemail.
1) O2 seems to use a different algorithm for switching between 2G and 3G compared to Orange. I found with Orange that the iPhone 3GS would try to maintain a 3G signal for as long as possible even if it dropped to 1 bar. The O2 version seems to be rather different and mainly appears to be sticking to the 2G GPRS network that has full coverage even if a low 3G signal exists. 3G signal only tends to appear if it is 4 or 5 bars strength. It is possible that this is a design consequence of O2 having lower claimed 3G coverage than Orange.
2) Battery seems to be used much faster on iPhone O2 than Orange. An 8 hour day connected to 2G (GPRS) took the battery from 100% down to 20%. This didn't happen with Orange iPhone which implies it either has better power management unless the O2 iPhone possibly has a faulty battery.
3) Testing the O2 Sim in a standard Nokia handset showed that a 3 bar 3G signal existed at the testing location. When the O2 sim was replaced in the iPhone it showed only 1 bar and immediately switched to GPRS 2G network. This would tend to backup other reports across the internet that show the iPhone doesn't hold a mobile signal as well as other phones.
4) You cannot receive calls when your iPhone is connected to the 2G network using the internet - the call will go straight to voicemail.
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