On 06/17/2009 04:19 PM, Christopher A. Williams wrote:
On Wed, 2009-06-17 at 13:15 -0430, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
But on this point I must agree: The Pre absolutely does
rock!!! Based on
having used mine for just a few days now, I can confidently
say that
Apple and the iPhone have some serious, formidable competition
on their
hands - including the new iPhone 3Gs.
Not while it's only available for CDMA networks.
That's a matter of opinion and taste as opposed to fact.
http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/151
Well, no. The pros and cons of GSM vs CDMA as *technologies* are largely
irrelevant in this discussion. The fact is that that most of the world
uses GSM and only a GSM phone is of interest to it. The same applies to
those Americans who want to use their phone while travelling abroad. The
Palm Pre will become competitive in these markets only when a GSM
version is released. I hope it's soon as the phone itself looks gorgeous.
Umm... If you actually read the article, you would know that it
specifically states the technology is not the issue, but market is, and
that even here the "war" is likely to continue ad-infinitum.
I'll admit to not reading the article, given that the title is "Which
Technology is Better: GSM or CDMA?" and we agree technology is not the
issue. I have now read it. It's very short and is 4 years old. It talks
about stuff that CDMA is going to do someday. Has it done these things
yet? I don't know, but I'm sure a more up-to-date reference would be
more useful.
If I were living outside the USA, I might tend to think the way you are
too. But actually, I *am* one of those Americans who uses their phone
while traveling abroad. I'm based in the USA and travel internationally
(mostly Western Europe right now) on a regular basis, and I have a
different perspective than you might realize. I will use GSM when I have
no other alternative - which actually is surprisingly less than I
thought.
Also, international roaming rates being what they are, I can vouch for
that most people's preference is to try to use a locally based mobile
phone, so the network compatibility issue is even smaller - regardless
of preference. I've personally paid some of those international roaming
charges. It's not a pretty sight...
I actually use multiple sim cards, which I can do with GSM. No need for
multiple phones.
CDMA is also growing in several places outside of the USA, and we're not
planning to replace that infrastructure in the USA anytime soon. The GSM
tide here seems to be shrinking more than growing.
References?
But all of that said, I would be shocked if we don't see a GSM version
of the Pre by early next year when AT&T and Verizon are supposed to pick
it up.
I understand some European operators are offering it from August 2009.
AFAIK all of these are GSM-based.
Don't get me wrong: I can easily believe that CDMA is cooler technically
that GSM (as Betamax was superior to VHS). I can even believe that a
future GSM might work over CDMA, because the user couldn't care less how
the signalling works, but they do very much care about the easy sim-card
portability. That's GSM's killer feature.
poc
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