Sorry for the misinformation about T-mobile USA - I just looked at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-Mobile_USA.  As you point out the CDMA
they use is just 3G.

On Feb 22, 5:10 pm, nxnlvz <[email protected]> wrote:
> As long at the computer itself can service the interrupts and the
> device has enough buffer to handle the high bit rate then a high rate
> is fine.  As with anything, it all comes down to what is waiting for
> what.  anything lower than 19.2 and the modem will always be waiting.
> anything higher than 38.4 and the computer will be waiting.   With a
> CDMA modem, since they don't send messages the same way, a little
> higher rate could be better.  Maybe 38.4 and 57.6. This is a guess
> though since I don't use the CDMA versions.
>
> At 115K rate though you should probably make sure you turn on either
> soft or hard flow control since the cheaper serial modems have pretty
> wimpy buffers in general. The higher end versions and USB versions
> seem to be better in this regard.  Again. This is an casual
> observation and not a something I have specifically tested for.
>
> As Far as TMobile is concerned... where do they have CDMA?  Unless you
> mean the 3G variety I thought their entire network in Aorth America
> was GSM.
>
> On Feb 22, 6:16 am, Alex <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Is there ever any disadvantage to using the highest baud rate
> > available?
>
> > (T-mobile USA has CDMA as well; could be that using that?)
>
> > On Feb 20, 9:39 pm, Thanasis <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > 11 messages per minute???
> > > Is this on a pure GSM channel? No GPRS?
>
> > > On Feb 20, 6:48 pm,nxnlvz<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > = 11.6 messages per minute

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