
01-23-2010, 11:51 AM
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| | | Join Date: Aug 2003 Posts: 1,723 Likes received: 6
Thanked 9 Times in 9 Posts
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To address the question, one must make assumptions about how it will connect and what artificial restrictions Apple will put on its use to appease its carrier partners.
Will it have BT, WiFi, EVDO (CDMA), and/or HSPDA (GSM)? Will it have native broadband like most netbooks or will it rely upon a BT or WiFi "tether?" And the answer is BT/ERD, WiFi, and 3G optional, No HSPDA. 3G pricing is attractive and month-to-month. Will Apple allow streaming video? Will it allow streaming video via broadband or will it restrict it to WiFi as it does with Sling? Apple is silent on these so my assumption is that they will continue to forbid them. Perhaps the biggest impact will result from novel applications empowred by the device and which we cannot easily foresee.. AT&T still seems to believe that the iPhone is a problem rather than an opportunity. However, many of their fears, for example of MMS, are not well justified. The aggressive pricing suggests that AT&T does not seem to think that it is a network killer. The new apps are not nearly so data intensive as Sling or tethering. I suspect that AT&T does not expect that enough of them will sell to create a load. They may be in for a rude surprise if students use them to replace text books.
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Thanks for ending the exclusivity, Steve. it is about time.
Last edited by whmurray; 01-27-2010 at 05:01 PM.
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