iPhone LTE Edition In Testing As Apple Reports Record Q4 Comments

Author Gordon Kelly
Published 20th Oct 2009
iPhone LTE Edition In Testing As Apple Reports Record Q4

Comments for iPhone LTE Edition In Testing As Apple Reports Record Q4

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comment xenos said on 20th October 2009

Slightly concerned by what thousands of 140Mbit wireless connections will do to peoples heads. We're all going to glow in the dark soon..

comment xenos said on 20th October 2009

Wait and later 340Mbits. :Twitch:

comment chrisjordan2008 said on 20th October 2009

and when the mp3 market share drops another 8% in comes the iphone nano, another 8% iphone shuffle, etc etc etc

comment Tony Walker said on 20th October 2009

@xenos

As long as it uses no more power than 3G then we won't glow any more than we currently do.

comment Tony Walker said on 20th October 2009

The comment by Jobs about "some great new products for 2010" was interesting. Tablet anyone? Of course, Scots readers have using this for years :)

comment xbrumster said on 20th October 2009

priority: flash/java support and then millions of others

comment drdark said on 20th October 2009

Should they really be worrying about the "next big thing" when, according to previous reports, the networks seems to manage 1.3Mb at the most?

P.S. Not saying they shouldn't be trying, that was just more of a dig at current speeds...

comment Gordon said on 20th October 2009

@ drdark - surely that's WHY they should be trying? 3G/HSDPA just doesn't cut it on a modern smartphone. LTE should go a long way to fixing that. A real world performance minimum of 2Mbit has been set, while real-world 3G network speeds should greatly improve as traffic moves from them to LTE.

comment Ben said on 20th October 2009

Incredible financial results. Online store has been down for a while now, waiting to see what new toys we get :)

comment GoldenGuy said on 20th October 2009

And what better way to celebrate your glowing Q4 results than to clean up your MacBook. Okay cool, but an entry level of now £800 isn't exactly helping us out, ya jerks. Stop upselling us, it's a recession!

comment Greg said on 20th October 2009

I wonder just how much O2 would charge to tether to that sort of service, seeing as they currently charge £15 to connect to their existing crappy network.

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