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On 2008-09-27 02:49:03, max_wedge wrote:
tell me exactly what it is you need more internal memory for that you can't do on a memory card?? My iPaq is a workhorse, it has 64MB internal but I have about 50 apps installed, and this has not slowed down the phone one bit.
Different types of memory have different speeds. Flash RAM is a lot slower than SDRAM.
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Posted: 2008-09-27 03:59:07
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Ok I question, If i get a non US version of X1(which is i) will it support all the frequencies in the US or not?
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Posted: 2008-09-27 04:12:34
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On 2008-09-27 04:12:34, djin wrote:
Ok I question, If i get a non US version of X1(which is i) will it support all the frequencies in the US or not?
X1i will be missing the 850MHz band (common in the U.S. rural areas). It also does not support the 1700MHz 3G band that T-Mobile uses.
AT&T users in urban areas shouldn't miss anything.
[ This Message was edited by: WhyBe on 2008-09-27 03:26 ]
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Posted: 2008-09-27 04:24:53
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On 2008-09-27 03:59:07, WhyBe wrote:
On 2008-09-27 02:49:03, max_wedge wrote:
tell me exactly what it is you need more internal memory for that you can't do on a memory card?? My iPaq is a workhorse, it has 64MB internal but I have about 50 apps installed, and this has not slowed down the phone one bit.
Different types of memory have different speeds. Flash RAM is a lot slower than SDRAM.
I realise this but it's fast enough to play video, read maps for gps, run applications (the "work" of the app get's done in RAM) etc. And 384MB is a lot of RAM for WM incase no one has noticed
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Posted: 2008-09-27 04:44:45
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On 2008-09-27 04:24:53, WhyBe wrote:
On 2008-09-27 04:12:34, djin wrote:
Ok I question, If i get a non US version of X1(which is i) will it support all the frequencies in the US or not?
X1i will be missing the 850MHz band (common in the U.S. rural areas). It also does not support the 1700MHz 3G band that T-Mobile uses.
AT&T users in urban areas shouldn't miss anything.
[ This Message was edited by: WhyBe on 2008-09-27 03:26 ]
but T-Mobile 3G also utilizes the 2100MHz band, so, wouldn't that be okay for X1i owners?
What's the difference between the two anyways? does it mean that some places only use 1700 and other places use 2100?
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Posted: 2008-09-27 05:08:04
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On 2008-09-27 05:08:04, NimmyxHuynh wrote:
but T-Mobile 3G also utilizes the 2100MHz band, so, wouldn't that be okay for X1i owners?
What's the difference between the two anyways? does it mean that some places only use 1700 and other places use 2100?
If I were you I would verify that T-Mobile is using the 2100 MHz for 3G in your area. Also check whether everything is compatible (I don't know). The X1a may very well be fully compatible with both T-Mobile and AT&T.
@max_wedge
I'm thinking the extra RAM is prep for WM7...or an apology for no accelerometer

[ This Message was edited by: WhyBe on 2008-09-27 05:05 ]
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Posted: 2008-09-27 05:53:59
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tell me exactly what it is you need more internal memory for that you can't do on a memory card?? My iPaq is a workhorse, it has 64MB internal but I have about 50 apps installed, and this has not slowed down the phone one bit.
Firstly, you cannot assume the user will always have a memory card in use. Also, what happens if some people installed all this application on the memory card, but for some reason he has to change the memory card due to various reasons, now because he installed in on his card, he could no longer use it

.
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Posted: 2008-09-27 06:06:20
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On 2008-09-27 05:08:04, NimmyxHuynh wrote:
What's the difference between the two anyways? does it mean that some places only use 1700 and other places use 2100?
Not sure about your area, but I think in my country, the different bands used by the network operator do not really overlap much I think. So say if the area has 850, then the 2100 will not be used (I think for most of the areas anyway)
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Posted: 2008-09-27 06:10:24
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Whybe,
So at& t is good? Because i will be travelling to Us soon, and i am not aware about their operators and stuff.
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Posted: 2008-09-27 07:07:45
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On 2008-09-27 04:24:53, WhyBe wrote:
On 2008-09-27 04:12:34, djin wrote:
Ok I question, If i get a non US version of X1(which is i) will it support all the frequencies in the US or not?
X1i will be missing the 850MHz band (common in the U.S. rural areas). It also does not support the 1700MHz 3G band that T-Mobile uses.
AT&T users in urban areas shouldn't miss anything.
[ This Message was edited by: WhyBe on 2008-09-27 03:26 ]
First, the X1 will have a quad band GSM including the 850 which basically means that it will work anywhere in the world on GSM, however the X1a will have the 3G band of 850 instead of the 900 band.
second for 3g usage you need at least 2 compatible bands with your carrier since one will be used for download and the other for upload.
so basically if you have the X1i you can use it for voice calls in US but you wont be able to use the 3G network
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Posted: 2008-09-27 07:35:06
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