As we approach the 3rd anniversary of the iPhone and AT & T marriage, iPhone users can agree on one thing, that is, AT & T is missing the mark. Why iPhone users feel this way?
First of all, about a quarter of AT & T's 81 million subscribers using wireless phones and mobile phones in the box. IPhone allows users to run applications such as Pandora, YouTube, and others that stream and hundreds of thousands of megabytes of music and video over the airwaves. This is of course a problem, on the contrary of the plan data that is "unlimited" AT & T's ability is not. AT & T alleges that 3% of the participants in smart phones, accounting for 40% of data traffic.
As a result of the bandwidth requirements of large users of the iPhone in densely populated cities such as New York and San Francisco (which need to update the networks), there was a growing number of service disruptions and slow performance of the 3G iPhone that users smoked in those areas. Ralph de la Vega, CEO of AT & T confirmed this when he said that their networks in Manhattan and San Francisco "... performing at lower levels of standards." Such confessions, and many wonder if AT & T a little more than they could chew when it began selling the iPhone with unlimited data plans
Sunday, March 7, 2010
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