You bring up some goodpoints. If you were referring to me making it
cut and dry and advising to try both, I have tried both side by side
where I live. My comments were based on that experience as well as
what I have heard to be generally true right now. It definitely does
depend on the area and the results might even flip flop as time goes
by.

On 3/2/11, Scott Granados <[email protected]> wrote:
> Actually, lets discuss this a little there are some interesting points here.
>
> The largest limiter is spectrum.  Each tower only has so much bandwidth
> (literal bandwidth) that it can use.  This means you can only push so many
> megabits over all for everyone on a given facility.  The more spectrum you
> have the more send and receive sessions you can have in parallel but the key
> thing to remembr it's a shared resource.  As these companies use new
> technologies you also notice they add more spectrum in different bands.  The
> newer technologies have more bands and use spectrum differently as well as
> more frequency space but the end result is more bandwidth and more efficient
> use of the available room.  So the more pipe that's available, the more
> spectrum and better the technology you can use more devices in the same
> allocated resource level so you can give users more slices to use or drop
> costs, any combination of moves based on the larger facility.
>
> As for ATT and Verizon in the states, try them both.  Don't just assume that
> ATT sucks and VZ does not.  I did this and was proven quite wrong.  ATT is 2
> - 3 times faster and has some more advanced calling features do to the
> different technologies used.  VZ is good no doubt but has problems as well
> and in the end it depends on the specific geography you will be using your
> device.  I would definitely try both side by side though, it's not as cut
> and dry as you make it.
>
> Thanks
> Scott
>
>
>
>
> On Mar 2, 2011, at 2:01 PM, Tyler wood wrote:
>
>> Rogers and at&t share the same towers, or at least rogers in Canada bought
>> them from the US.
>>
>> No wonder signal, overall network speed suck here, though I'm not getting
>> any dropped calls.
>>
>> I must say though, I can't wait to move to the us and go on vz. From what
>> my partner tells me (he has the droid x), vz has quite a good network.
>>
>> On 2011-03-01, at 8:29 PM, James Mannion wrote:
>>
>>> I really think it is because mobile networks are not able yet to
>>> handel people putting unlimited demands for data access on them. Any
>>> network has its upper limits and mobile networks are still less able
>>> to handel demand than land line networks. If they put limits that
>>> serve a purpose, but are not over limiting, that keeps people from
>>> constantly doing things like streaming the most data intensive video
>>> stuff and whatever else they can fid with no concern of any
>>> consequences to themselves, bringing down the entire network so nobody
>>> can do anything and then everybody is left unhappy. People will be a
>>> little more reasonable with what they do if there is a cost to them.
>>> Having said that, AT&T's netwrk can not even handel the limited use in
>>> some areas including the city where I live. During the day I can not
>>> even pull up a small web page on AT&T's 3g network. It simply times
>>> out. I can not stream pandora, I can barely use the weather app to
>>> pull its small amount of data. Since my contract is almost up, I have
>>> signed on with Verizon and I can tell you that right now their network
>>> actually works in my area. My understanding is that this exact
>>> situation is not uncommon at all. Maybe Verizon will manage their
>>> resources and growth in a way that does not create another AT&T.
>>>
>>> On 3/1/11, Sarah Alawami <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> what's the theory behind VZ droping its unlimited data plan? read more:
>>>>
>>>> http://bit.ly/e7omui
>>>>
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