iPhone 4's multiband antenna makes it a true 'world phone'
This morning, I read liveblogs about the WWDC keynote with growing irritation. I'd been hoping for a 64 GB capacity bump for iPhone 4, even though I knew in the back of my mind that engineering practicalities made it unlikely. The news that FaceTime will not only be WiFi only, but will also work only from one iPhone 4 to another, was also extremely disappointing. And the fact that the iPhone won't be getting down here to New Zealand until July, as opposed to June for the States, UK, and a few other countries, was probably the most annoying of all.Then I went to the tech specs page for the iPhone 4, and like rolling fog after the sunrise, all of my irritation evaporated. Back in March, I wrote this: "Apple can put a better camera in it, add more capacity, a better processor, a front-facing camera for videoconferencing, and a dozen other things -- but quite honestly, I'd be perfectly happy if none of that made it into the next-gen iPhone so long as one feature does find its way in: support for 900 MHz UMTS/HSDPA."
According to Apple's tech specs for iPhone 4 & the FCC filing, I got my wish. Read on to find out why this unsung feature is actually a really big deal -- not just to me, but to millions of potential iPhone 4 customers.
Previous iPhones worked on three UMTS/HSDPA frequencies: 850, 1900, and 2100 MHz, which are the three main GSM 3G frequencies in the Western Hemisphere. 900 MHz UMTS/HSDPA is fairly widespread in the Eastern Hemisphere, including in New Zealand -- the only wireless provider who directly sells the iPhone here in NZ, Vodafone, operates its extended 3G network at 900 MHz. With the iPhone 3G and 3GS, this meant that the iPhone was incapable of accessing Vodafone's 3G network outside of downtown areas served by 2100 MHz networks, and it had to fall back on GPRS -- which is so slow it's nearly unusable.
iPhone 4 has a pentaband antenna/chipset (although the Apple specs page only lists four, the FCC lists five bands), meaning it works not only on the GSM frequencies the earlier iPhones did, but it also now supports 900 MHz UMTS/HSDPA. This increases the utility of the phone by a great deal for many international users, many of whom (including me) will now have access to extended 3G networks for the first time with iPhone 4. The antenna in iPhone 4 also means it's now a true "world phone" -- with access to GSM 3G over different frequencies, iPhone 4 should be able to connect to virtually any GSM 3G network in the world now (with the notable exception of T-Mobile in the US).
It's also likely iPhone 4 will have much better wireless reception than earlier iPhones because of its construction. According to the keynote, the stainless steel side casing functions as part of iPhone 4's antenna. Hopefully this will result in far fewer instances where my "smartphone" has no coverage at all while my wife's virtually featureless "dumbphone" has two or more bars. With a universal antenna and improved wireless reception, I can easily forgive the other disappointments from today's keynote.
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This morning, I read liveblogs about the WWDC keynote with growing irritation. I'd been hoping for a 64 GB capacity bump for iPhone 4, even...
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There are a lot of details left out on the 3G capability of the iPhone 4. The 900Mhz is actually an augmentation of the three original frequencies supported. And this has nothing to do with the iPhone, it has something to do with the chip that Apple uses. If the hardware in the chip supports it, the iPhone will support it.
http://www.edepot.com/iphone.html
Look at the site above for iPhone secrets. The 3G section is in the hardware section, and details all the capabilities.
@tnkgrl I can't find anything about iPhone 4 supporting Japan's NTT DoCoMo (800 Mhz) Band.
I see an 850 and a 900
Up until today, I was certain that nature abhorred a vacuum.
June 09 2010 at 10:27 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplySo in the face of facts from multiple sources that go against your original claim, not only do you dismiss *all* of these sources as inaccurate, you also try to dismiss the entire debate by claiming not to care. You then move on to insulting a country of 4 million people. Repeatedly.
Congratulations! Your résumé demonstrates that you are fully qualified for a lucrative position on the Fox News broadcasting team.
lollercoaster:
http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/497100/1901369
OMGWTFBBQ:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4QD_V1n3LM
"Get your facts strait." (sic)
LOL:
http://www.pcworld.com/article/148163/new_zealand_kicks_off_iphone_3g_launch.html
ROFL:
http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/08/07/10/first_iphone_3g_tear_down_photos_live_from_new_zealand_launch.html
LMAO:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_iPhone#New_Zealand_release
You can believe what you like, but the facts are not on your side.
http://www.engadget.com/2008/06/25/iphone-3g-on-sale-in-new-zealand-a-day-before-the-us/
"I guessed you were some kind of Aussie"
A. I'm an American expatriate
B. Kiwi â Aussie. That's like saying Brits and Irish are the same.
The iPhone 3G was launched in New Zealand several hours before it was available in the US. So yes, it was available to customers in this country before anywhere else in the world, including the States. This is historical fact and easily verified by a simple Google search.
"You've obviously never met anybody from NZ"
I *live* in New Zealand. Read that Abraham Lincoln quote again. Maybe a few more times. Until it sinks in.
Don't get your hopes up about Skype "standardising" FaceTime from iPhone to MacBook: http://www.tuaw.com/2010/06/09/skype-hedges-on-facetime-compatibility/
As for your assertion that NZ is a "non country" :
A. In 2008, the iPhone 3G was available in NZ before anywhere else in the world
B. An Abraham Lincoln quote comes to mind: "Better to keep silent and be thought a fool than speak and remove all doubt."
D'oh! I wrote "HPSA" instead of "HSPA." I hate it when I don't see my typos until looking at my posts hours later. Grrrr....
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