That is because the Nexus One you had was not compatible with AT&T 3g. They
didn't make a software update to fix this, it is a hardware limitation of
the radio and supported frequencies, so any already sold N1 and anyone who
chooses the T-mobile one is only compatible with T-mo 3g, the AT&T one is
for AT&T and Rogers 3G. they are all quad band GSM, so they work on edge and
lower for any GSM provider.

Michael Gorman
http://michaeljgorman.com


On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 9:55 AM, Roger E. Rustad, Jr. <
roger.rus...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Sat, Mar 20, 2010 at 4:57 PM, Chris Penn <cantorm...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Roger mentioned that the Nexus One still only supports Edge.  I am
>> looking at the website and this is what they have as one of the
>> purchase options:
>>
>>    Compatible with 3G on AT&T (U.S.) and Rogers Wireless (Canada)
>>    Supports three 3G/UMTS bands (850/1900/2100 MHz) and four GSM
>> radio frequencies (850/900/1800/1900 MHz)
>>
>> If Edge is still the only option I have misunderstood and no longer
>> want this phone.
>>
>
> I thought I remember reading (or hearing) from a reliable source that was
> the case.
>
> Remember that compatible with 3G != true 3G speeds
>
> (At Pebble Beach, I popped out a 3G SIM card from an AT&T iPhone and put it
> in the Google Nexus phone, and we did NOT get the some 3G speeds.  I might
> be missing something, though...)
>
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>
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