WiWavelength
S4GRU Staff Member-
Posts
18,133 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
429
Content Type
Profiles
Blogs
Articles
Media Demo
Gallery
Downloads
Events
Forums
Everything posted by WiWavelength
-
T-Mobile LTE & Network Discussion
WiWavelength replied to CriticalityEvent's topic in General Topics
You are missing the main carrier versus secondary downlink distinction. Unpaired Lower 700 MHz E block can never be the main carrier. But when the main carrier signal fails, so too does the secondary downlink, regardless of propagation advantage. AJ- 4,425 replies
-
T-Mobile LTE & Network Discussion
WiWavelength replied to CriticalityEvent's topic in General Topics
No, they do not. You misunderstand. AJ- 4,425 replies
-
Highly unlikely. We have found zero evidence of lesser bandwidth carriers. Every market has been 5 MHz FDD or nil. AJ
- 38 replies
-
- 2
-
No, rubbing their nipples is all they do, all the time. They do not know how to do anything else. AJ
- 47 replies
-
- 1
-
- Suddenlink
- Gigabit
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
No, they would just rub their nipples. AJ
- 47 replies
-
- 1
-
- Suddenlink
- Gigabit
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
Maybe it will soon, you know, all of a sudden. AJ
- 47 replies
-
- 7
-
- Suddenlink
- Gigabit
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
T-Mobile LTE & Network Discussion
WiWavelength replied to CriticalityEvent's topic in General Topics
Ascertion is right. A Dish-T-Mobile combination still would bring to the table little valuable low band spectrum -- outside of that all important market of Myrtle Beach. And do not try to make the argument using the Lower 700 MHz E block -- that spectrum is a hot mess in so many ways. Dish does not hold those licenses in New York, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston, and San Francisco. The spectrum is just 6 MHz unpaired. And it is standardized for carrier aggregation only with mid band spectrum, totally negating its low band propagation advantage. Carrier aggregation, done right, should have a low band main carrier aggregated with a mid/high band secondary downlink. Lower 700 MHz E block may never have that. It is practically orphaned spectrum in search of a sensible use. AJ- 4,425 replies
-
- 1
-
For Sprint band 41 and carrier aggregation, maybe it should be called iOS 9 "Purgatory" -- even though that ski resort is in Colorado, not California. AJ
-
Robert knows my reference, but for everyone else, Heavenly is a ski resort in South Lake Tahoe, CA. And in this iOS codename convention, it fits the bill in more ways than one. AJ
-
Of course, I know where Yosemite is. He is right here. AJ
-
No, no, no. It will be iOS 9 "Heavenly." And the iPhoners will say, "Amen." AJ
-
Sprint to join Rural Operators Roaming Hub (CCA and RRPP thread)
WiWavelength replied to marioc21's topic in General Topics
Well, well, well, look who is back. AJ -
AJ
-
That bean counters and marketers in industry created this issue does not mean science needed to create a separate binary system. People just need to deal with the ambiguity by reading the fine print. Besides, no one uses the kibi- type prefixes because they just flat out sound like gibberish. AJ
-
Even if connected to 3-6 Mbps ADSL, your home Wi-Fi is still plenty fast enough for almost any legitimate uses on your smartphone. Do not get hung up on e-penis speed test results. Instead, please use Wi-Fi at home and conserve macro network capacity for mobile users who actually need it. Otherwise, you just contribute to unnecessary network congestion, which ultimately comes home to roost for everyone. AJ
-
As units of measurement, meters and grams operate in the base 10 system. Bits and bytes do not. There should be no confusion between the two for the properly informed. AJ
-
Your indoctrination is complete. You are no longer required to report to your nearest reeducation camp. AJ
-
Negatory. The whole kibi-, mebi-, and gibi- nonsense is just a bunch of poopi- made up for people who cannot do basic binary math. The 2^x system is how it was, is, and should be. AJ
-
Wait, you have a Jeep? No way. That comes as a surprise. AJ
- 4,982 replies
-
- 3
-
- android app
- signal strength
-
(and 9 more)
Tagged with:
-
Yeah, this is pretty much what it will look like on Big Red. AJ
-
No, they do. Luxury automobiles typically carry more size and weight than what is necessary, thus inhibiting gas mileage. But people still buy luxury automobiles because of the way they look and feel. AJ
-
Why do people buy luxury automobiles? A Le Car will get them from place to place. AJ
-
No, that is how women like their men -- but the men rarely live up to the standard. AJ
-
The title also needs to be changed to "Which roams on which?" or "What roams on what?" So, now, let that bother you. AJ