AT&T Wireless Phone "Upgrades" Aren't 372
An anonymous reader writes "AT&T Wireless is requiring customers in parts of California and New York and elsewhere to "upgrade" their phones and offering free replacements. The catch? In most cases the upgrades have worse features than the phones they're replacing."
No Bluetooth (Score:5, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:5, Informative)
Re:No Bluetooth-Lost and Found. (Score:4, Informative)
Unlocking your T-Mobile phone (Score:3, Informative)
Use the following topic and sub-topic to make sure it gets routed to the right people:
Topic: Products and Services
Sub-topic: GSM & Smart Card Technology
I had two earlier phones (Nokia & Motorola) unlocked via the e-mail, and I recently had my Nokia 3650 unlocked via the above form.
Just make sure you've been a customer for at least 6 months, and that you are STILL a customer.
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:5, Informative)
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:5, Informative)
Your friends probably use phones that work on CDMA/TDMA.
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:4, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:5, Informative)
You're either incredibly foolish or a troll (my money is on the latter), but I'll reply anyway: YES there ARE GSM networks in the U.S.A. and YES every single one of them sells phones that require SIM (subscriber identity module) cards. As other posters who are actually clued in have noted, it's part of the GSM spec for a phone to have a SIM card.
There were two types of SIM cards: the original, old Type I cards, which looked like a credit card, and the newer Type II cards, which are the thumbnail-sized cards. You can see pretty pictures here [geocities.com]. Type I cards haven't been used since the mid-90s. The last Type I-accepting phone I remember seeing was (IIRC) a GSM Motorola StarTac.
The only major GSM carrier in the U.S.A. until 3 or 4 years ago was Voicestream (Western Wireless), which became T-Mobile after the Deutsche Telekom buyout [crn.com]. As part of the upstart of 2.5G services here in the U.S., other companies such as AT&T and BellSouth started building up GSM networks.
You can see the "proof" that they're GSM networks by Googling for "BellSouth GSM [google.com]" or "AT&T GSM [google.com]." Other proof that there are GSM phones: I just took the battery off my Sony Ericsson T68i and...suprise! A GSM SIM card! Just like the ones I used to put in the back of every customer's phone back when I was a VoiceStream dealer. Just like the GSM SIM cards inside every single "next generation" AT&T phone, and every single T-Mobile phone. So forth and so on ad nauseum.
In related news, I've blacklisted you for making repeated stupid statements without taking 10 seconds to STFG.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:4, Informative)
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:3, Informative)
No you won't, unless there is a T-Mobile plan that doesn't include nationwide roaming, which I have never seen. I have T-Mobile, and whenever I go down to North Carolina, I am roaming on Cingular's GSM network and have never paid a single red cent for roaming.
The only roaming I have ever paid is when I roam internationally. Then I pay many red cents.
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:5, Informative)
One multi-band phone (that is TDMA/GSM capable) actually requires a special SIM card for the dual functionality. This SIM module contains the EEPROM equivalent for the TDMA programming of the phone separate from the GSM side of the SIM. This is the Sony T26U (it also utilizes Analog towers too). This a true GSM phone with a TDMA overlay. The Siemans S46 has a built in ROM and uses a SIM, this is a TDMA phone with a GSM overlay.
But all GSM phones require a SIM card, this is not only a spec for the GSM network, but if a GSM phone (assuming multi-band, ie. Siemans S46) is running without a SIM, it would only run in TDMA mode, and if not a multi-band, it would not complete its "power up" to an operational state; it would error and demand a SIM to be entered. The Sony T62U will not function without a SIM.
Most GSM phones are NOT multi-band. They would therefor require a SIM. Multi-band phones generally don't come with the "eye candy" that other phones do (ie. Cam, Colour, Blue Tooth). These are more for people who need a phone to be a phone all the time (best coverage over multiple networks) and not a toy.
For a little insight... Thanks to LNP or line number portability there is now an MIN/MDN combination within the HLR (Home Location Registry). The MDN is your Mobile Dialable Number but you also have a MIN which is the Mobile Identification Number (or Routing Number). Some of you AT&T customers may have seen on your TDMA phones you manually programmed a number into your phone that was not your wireless number. This is what allows the porting. People dial your "phone #" which goes to the company who owns your number range (from 0000-9999), who have that number cross referenced with the your current carrier. They then send your call to the carrier your are currently with and your carrier then address' your phone by an assigned routing number (and it is a number in a range they currently own!).
Example: You are with Sprint from 555-0000 and move to AT&T. Your phone is programmed with your ROUTING# 555-1234. You can place calls, but not receive them. Your old phone is still fully functional, so you can RECEIVE/PLACE calls there). AT&T initiates a port request to Sprint. They send Sprint a request with your Name/Addr/Cell#/Acct#/. Sprint setups the link in their systems to Switch/Forward your calls to AT&T. Once the link on Sprints end is completed that allows INCOMING calls to move from Sprint to AT&T and through their switches and to your cell phone via a cross reference to your assigned routing#. Your Sprint account is also closed at this point and your old phone stops working. But ALL your incoming calls go to the carrier who owns your number, and is then sent to your current carrier. This is transparent with GSM as all programming is done Over the Air.
If you have a routing number in your phone, and you call it; you will get someone else as routing numbers are actual phone numbers, but are internal only. All numbers are now used twice. Once as a link from phone to network (routing#, internal, dynamic), and once as a link between network and the world (dialable#, external, static). With the way this system works, they all started with your MIN==MDN, but when you change carriers and as more and more inter/intra-company ports are setup, your routing# will be given to someone else, and will most likely never be a match to your dialable# again.
Your phone# only goes as far as the company who owns it.
Just my 0.02. Jiggs
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:3, Informative)
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:3, Informative)
Really blame the vendors, Nokia, Sony and Motorola. They took off blue tooth, didnt offer phones with 850. Even blackberry didnt have 850 when first out, they do now.
The phone vendors new for years that 850 was going to be used. The whole TDMA->GSM upgrade path was known years ago.
The article is total fluff, if a phone had 850 it was offered. Ci
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:5, Interesting)
Once you have used it, Bluetooth is hard to give up.
Bluetooth data connection (Score:4, Informative)
It's not the speediest thing, but it's far nicer browsing on a laptop than a phone and is faster than dialup.
And of course you can use the bluetooth phone as a controller for various apps on the laptop - most useful for presentations, but it has a few other cool uses as well.
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:3, Informative)
Just switch to Cingular; you're all gonna be Cingular customers soon anyway.
Re:No Bluetooth (Score:3, Informative)
I called the 800 number and was told that I could either use the new phone when it was sent to me (and send my t68i back), or return the new one and continue using my current one.
I am opting to continue using my T68i since the T226 doesn't have Bluetooth, a very important feature to me.
I don't know if users of other phones are being required to upgrade. The T68i is a tri-band phone (800, 900, and 1900Mhz), which
Mmmm (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
How would you like it if Ford sold Mustangs that performed much worse than expected, and as a fix, gave you a Pinto as a replacement?
"Free upgrades" (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:5, Funny)
it has 3 main features
1) sends and recieves phone calls/texts
2) stores names of people whom i contact using feature 1
3) game of snake for when i'm not using 1) or 2) and am bored
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:2)
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:3, Informative)
It's a 2.5G technology allowing for some serious latency and correction for doppler shift and almost 1.2 seconds of delay between packets, fairly well.
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/T/TDMA.html
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:3)
(Of course, there are other problems too, but this is the one relevant to this question.)
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:3, Interesting)
Because AT&TWS doesnt make phones.
Same reason Verizon doesnt have GSM phones, different technology, and phone vendors dont make them.
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:5, Informative)
They do. [attwireless.com] The Siemens S46. Great phones! Major travellers carry them (the editor of a major magazine's international bureau, for one example that I know off the top of my head).
BTW To pick nits, GSM doesn't fall back to TDMA. GSM is a TDMA-based network. TDMA is an architecture, and GSM is a specification.
Re:Is the S46 really the best for coverage? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"Free upgrades" (Score:4, Informative)
My Siemens S46 [my-siemens.com] does both GSM bands and both TDMA bands. It gets pretty good AT&T coverage in rural Oregon, which is saying something. Cheap, too, and works as a dataphone and web browser. Unfortunately, no high-end functionality: camera, etc. are lacking, and it's monochrome.
My favourite AT&T Phone feature (Score:5, Funny)
No Camera!? (Score:5, Funny)
I like the car DVD with windshield projection (Score:5, Funny)
Re:No Camera!? (Score:5, Interesting)
so where is the catch??? (Score:5, Funny)
That is no catch. Heck some software vendors force you to upgrade, force you to pay for the upgrade, and upgrades have worse features than the original software.
Free replace? (Score:5, Funny)
War is peace. Freedom is slavery. (Score:5, Insightful)
(On a more serious note-- hey, if Microsoft can define 'repackaging old Apple, Xerox and Unix tech for the masses' as 'innovation', then sure, a downgrade can be an 'upgrade'. Businesses lying is nothing new.)
Of course, the worst part of all of this? (Score:2)
Seen this (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Seen this (Score:4, Insightful)
So you're the guy who almost hit me today!
This happened to me (Score:5, Interesting)
Finally I got fed up and switched to T-Mobile. I got a nice phone for $0, and get unlimited wireless web usage for $10/mo (which got me 4 megs on AT&T). Getting my number transfered from AT&T to the new account took an 11 minute phone call and 6 hours to process.
Most importantly my calls aren't having the same problems, and I can actually use my phone again.
The irony is that between the time I called to switch my number and the time that the number switched I got an SMS saying that they were sending me a new (bluetoothless, underfeatured) phone for free. Now I'll have two to put up on eBay
Upgrades = downgrades (Score:4, Interesting)
The newer model as the number keys laid out in converging diagonal lines, instead of straight up and down like the old one, so I have to think about and hunt for each number key. I guess the standard phone-button layout was just not good enough for Nokia.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Upgrades = downgrades (Score:3, Informative)
Not so bad (Score:5, Interesting)
Not as good as the old (Score:5, Funny)
The old phones ran at 1900mhz. So the new phones are, what, like less than half as good as the old ones?
standardization (Score:2)
Nokia 5165. (Score:2)
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
AT&T Wireless? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:AT&T Wireless? (Score:3, Informative)
This is retirement point for the non-GSM AT&T networks in the areas where the customers are getting these notices. They have to get a new phone from somebody, because their old phone is about to become obsolete.
Great (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sticking with my 6310i until it dies, then I'll buy another one off eBay.
This doesn't sound like a bad thing (Score:5, Interesting)
So you can still keep your old phone, and it'll still work as it has in the past -- somewhat poorly, but not differently. Or, AT&T is offering free replacement phones that have improved reception but may not have all the features of your old phone. I don't see the problem here. If you want to stick with what you have, nothing is stopping you. AT&T is giving you a choice, which is more than most companies would do.
Just my two cents.
But they didn't give a choice. (Score:4, Informative)
When I saw what a feature-lacking piece of shit the T226 is compared to my T68i, [sonyericss...pgrade.com] I called the number on the card to see if I had an option of declining this allegedly-generous gesture. When they told me I could refuse the T226, they took my name and checked to see if my T226 had already been shipped out, and it had-- via UPS, according to the CSR, who told me to just refuse the package.
I am in complete agreement that the T616 should have been the replacement phone for the T68i. Not everyone is purely interested in stupid-ass ringtones and games. Every feature I bought the T68i for is missing in the T226, so I don't see how anyone can call that an upgrade with a straight face.
~Philly
Re:But they didn't give a choice. (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, UPS is NOT the US Postal Service so I'm wondering if this law applies to them. If so, then nobody HAS to send in the old phone. They can keep it and do whatever they want. If the law does not apply then I don't k
Who's laughing now? (Score:5, Funny)
0xdeadbeef (Score:4, Interesting)
As soon as number portability kicked in, we bailed out for t-mobile GSM. The difference was like night and day. at&t wireless showed no signal in my home. The new phones (free t610 camera phones, by the way, with bluetooth, infrared, etc...) now show a good signal. No roaming charges, the call quality is now much better, and there are hardly any dropouts even if the phone shows only a single blip on the signal strength meter.
When I called to cancel at&t they lamely offered an upgrade to gsm. No thanks. Even if gsm is supposedly a better technology, I'm sure that at&t would find a way to screw it up, somehow.
Cingular wants to swallow up at&t? I hope they choke.
So? And Request for Opinions on AT&T Wireless (Score:5, Insightful)
On topic, DUH. They aren't saying you HAVE to switch, they are just strongly suggesting it because it will improve your reception. And you forked out all that extra cash for a smart phone, you should be prepared to do it again. If AT&T was going to disable your phone, then it would be reasonable to make them replace it with the same thing. But as it is they are just offering you one of their standard phones free. If you still want all those extra features, you can pay again.
It's not extra nice, but it makes perfect sense to me. I don't think you can really falt AT&T for this. Sorry.
The OT part: I am seroiusly thinking about switching carries for my phone (I don't care about my current number, so that hassle doesn't factor in), and I'm seriously looking at AT&T. I was thinking of getting a Sony-Ericsson T610 (or T616, whatever they want to sell me) for it's bluetooth and java (and looks).
Is AT&T a very nice provider? How hard is it to use a bluetooth phone as a modem (you know, connect to the internet through it)? Where can I find directions on that?
But overall, how are people's expiriances with it?
PS: I'm in eastern Kansas if you know what the reception is like there
Re:So? And Request for Opinions on AT&T Wirele (Score:2)
I've been using ATT for over a year. While I'm not 100% pleased as punch with them, they offer one feature I've come to rely on: unlimited free incoming text messages. I've got scripts and alerts set up at my work that lets me know useful and immediate information. Further, it allows the personnel I support to "page" me without them e
Re:So? And Request for Opinions on AT&T Wirele (Score:3, Informative)
http://nordicgroup.us/ssub/sfbaratings.htm [nordicgroup.us]
http://nordicgroup.us/ssub/scaratings.htm [nordicgroup.us]
(look at the overall coverage numbers in that table)
Generally Verizon is considered to have the best coverage and service. SprintPCS would be second and they have much cooler phones (but only one BlueTooth phone). Overall CDMA has a technical edge over GSM in terms of spectral efficiency and the carriers abil
Re:So? And Request for Opinions on AT&T Wirele (Score:3, Insightful)
The phone for which I paid extra money to AT&T has now been shown to have substandard reception due to the way they have built their network. This rather extraordinary step of offering a free phone pretty much acknowledges that they screwed up by selling me a 68i since it is now obsolete viz-a-vis their network.
The only reason I chose AT&T as a provider was because at the time I got my phone and plan they were the only company in my area offering a bluetooth-capable
Heh heh heh (Score:2, Interesting)
[...]
Nokia N-Gage
[...]
Aside from the inevitable N-Gage jokes, what gives? Considering the N-Gage just came out the past few months, you'd think it wouldn't have shipped with the old configuration.
Almost switched to AT&T a little bit ago (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Almost switched to AT&T a little bit ago (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, I can. TPSA Poland, installing special dampeners on their lines to prevent people from using modems faster than 12Kbps, so they could rip them off with their own Internet packages (ADSL) instead of using the lines to connect to cheaper ISPs.
Re:Almost switched to AT&T a little bit ago (Score:2)
Re:Almost switched to AT&T a little bit ago (Score:2)
Do I agree with the policy? No. The only way it could be enforced is to listen in on a call from time to time to ensure that it is human voice rather than modem chatter... and that opens up a whole new can of worms.
Treo 600 is an 850 mhz phone (Score:3, Interesting)
It's really not that bad (Score:2, Interesting)
AT&T have just mishandled things by not conducting a survey first to figure out who really needed bluetooth/non US frequencies. Before all this publicity they could have made the survey ambiguous enough that everyone didn't claim to be using every T68 feature.
I just got the mail saying they'r
'Dupgrades' is the word you're looking for (Score:2, Funny)
I got one of the "free" phones... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'll keep using my T68i, and when they cut my service off, I'll demand a refund for my original phone. Then I'll take my business elsewhere.
AT&T shouldn't be forcing their customers to "upgrade" to anything. I smell a class-action lawsuit coming.
Just complain (Score:3, Informative)
Scam (Score:5, Informative)
I'm currently shopping around for a new provider, though the crazy set of plans and prices that all the firms offer makes it impossible to compare plans or even figure out how much the service will cost.
Got one.. and returned in less than a day! (Score:5, Informative)
Where does one begin?
Tried the phone for a couple of hours and just gave up on it. Sent it back. Thankfully you can switch the SIM card back to the old phone so easily. If you have a T68, you are stepping way down with this phone! BMW to Yugo. You're a fool if you keep it. And now, of course, it'll be a case of once bitten, twice shy if they try it again.
I don't know who to blame more: AT&T or Sony-Ericson. For AT&T, this will go down as one the stupidest tech marketing blunders in a while! For Sony-Ericson, well, the engineering team that designed the T226 should be taken out and shot. At the very least they should barred from designing any consumer electronic product - for life!
When the T68 came out I thought maybe Ericson might finally have figured out what Nokia does right - with this phone it's apparent the T68 was just a lucky, but utterly random accident. :-p
Nokia 8260 affected? (Score:2)
Three years ago I used to get dropped calls a lot but for the last two years, and currently, I am quite satisified with the reception, the price, and the features. I'm entirely satisfied with AT&T and worried about what I should do, since apparently no one else is.
Am I affected by this?
Just like... (Score:2, Funny)
ah Buetooth hackable duh! (Score:3, Funny)
maybe AT&T got security minded?
Also in Portland Oregon (Score:5, Informative)
Now, some background information on the return issue - I used to manage the returns department for a dotcom and thus I was supposed to know a bit about returns issues. I cannot name the specific regulation by name, but the FTC says that if a merchant sends you a product that you didn't order, it is your's for free. They can ask for you to pay for it, they can ask for you to return it, they can call you bad names for keeping it, but they cannot require you to return it nor can they require you to pay for it. Keep this in mind for this new phone and any future boxes that end up at your door step. Now, since we are all ATTWS subscribers and signed some contract when we got our service, they might actually be able to force us to return the new phones or pay for them, but I'm not sure.
Now here's the part about the whole deal that makes me worried. Why are they sending new phones for free to people? Why aren't they just letting us keep our outdated phones and stop selling them, and start selling the new phones? What is the benefit of sending me a new phone and asking for me to return my old phone? At first I thought they wanted to give me a new phone with more features so that I'd send more SSM messages, or download ringtones, or do something else that would generate more revenue for ATTWS, but I don't think that is the case, if it was I think they would have given out even cooler phones. Frankly I cannot use a phone without Bluetooth, I just cannot, if the new phone had all the features of my old phone and some bonuses it would be a different story but... ATTWS is doing something it doesn't have to. They are giving out free phones when they don't have to. It doesn't make any sense, they should just stop selling the old phones. I think there is more to the story unfortunately, and I think that the end effect is that sooner or later my old phone will no longer work with ATTWS.
Will someone please file a class action lawsuit. I'm already ready to sign up.
Re:Also in Portland Oregon (Score:3, Informative)
The T68 does 900/1800/1900 and the replacement does 850 and 1900. The 850 network is in addition to the 1900 one. Otherwise they wouldn't be getting any extra capacity.
As for replacing TDMA or CDMA with GSM, well that could happen, but when you hand out dual-band phones, you expand your network, not just shift it around. Otherwise the FCC might come and get those frequencies b
All I want to do is make phone calls.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:All I want to do is make phone calls.... (Score:5, Informative)
Not necessarily a required upgrade (Score:3, Interesting)
The article (I read it!) does say that to take advantage of the updated network I need to upgrade the phone, but the point is that it's not a forced upgrade and I can freely continue using my current phone. I'm going to try and get through to customer retention and get a more decent upgrade phone, though.
Low Feature Phones. (Score:5, Funny)
Sales Droid: So Maam, this is our most fully-featured phone
Me: That's great but all I want to do is make phone calls.
Droid: Sorry! That feature was depricated last year.
Me: What! Oh well.
So who do I use instead? (Score:3, Informative)
So if I need to switch carriers, who else still offers analog service?
Who cares about the phones? TDMA is the way to go (Score:3, Informative)
I have TDMA service through Cellular One in Oregon and I LOVE it. I've made phone calls on Mt Hood, South Sister and lots of other strange, way away from civilization places you wouldn't expect a phone to work.
Plus, TDMA plans are generally cheaper because the cell companies have already paid off their investment in them.
Re:Who cares about the phones? TDMA is the way to (Score:4, Informative)
i say all of the above being an unabashed GSM user. i just hate Verizon and like the features of GSM phones.
and a hint for at&t people getting "upgrades": you're probably eligible for a customer retention upgrade. skip all this crossgrade nonsense and call at&t and say you want a new phone for being a long-term customer. i got a T616 for my T68i for free like this. you'll end up getting whatever prices a new subscriber would get, so check on at&t's website before you call.
I had the same problem with sprint (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.sonyericssont226upgrade.com (Score:3, Informative)
Counting the days until my contract expires (Score:3, Interesting)
But now I have a 12 inch Powerbook that I'd really like to take on the road, and a bluetooth phone with data capabilities is a must. Until my contract expires in July I am stuck. I'm looking at T-Mobile with their unlimited data plan.
morons abound... (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah, the phone blows. You're the moron that bought a phone that didn't support GSM850. I've had a phone from the BEGINNING that did, and still do. A SonyEricsson T616. It's easy enough to get one cheap, too. It's called a contract extension. And don't whine about the contract either, you COULD go prepaid. ATTWS has some of the best prices in the business. Mod me troll is you like, but hey, caveat emptor. It's your own fault.
Re:morons abound... (Score:4, Informative)
And the best prices in the business aren't much good if a company turns around and says "all that stuff we promised in our contract and materials? We were just kidding! Sucks to be you!" That's arguably fraudulent ... glad to see you think the customers are to blame though.
Re:morons abound... (Score:3, Informative)
Anyone remember Sprint Spectrum? (Score:3, Interesting)
Eventually, other GSM providers popped up across the country, including Omnipoint (later Voicestream, now T-Mobile), PacBell (in some markets), and a few others. But Sprint Spectrum, later bought out or merged (?) with Sprint PCS, started to let their GSM network stagnate, focusing on building the CDMA network instead.
A class-action suit was brought against Sprint, charging that they promised their customers inter-city usage on the nationwide Sprint network, but never delivered. The result of the lawsuit was that Sprint was to provide their GSM customers with a PCS (CDMA) phone and a small rebate towards PCS service.
Well, it couldn't have played out better for Sprint -- they were able to move their customers to CDMA, had a legitimate reason to shut down the GSM network, and here's the best part: they provided old model, REFURBISHED phones to the customers who were being moved from GSM to CDMA. Conveniently, the slightly nicer models of the replacement phones were frequently out of stock, and if you wanted to get a brand-new model, you would be forced to sign up as a new customer.
Years later, I tried to get an old GSM phone from the Sprint Spectrum network SIM-unlocked. Trying to convince the Sprint PCS people that I had a Sprint-branded GSM phone was like trying to tell them the ocean was purple.
More about GSM networks and operating frequencies (Score:3, Informative)
In North-America, the 1900MHz range was reserved for digital cellular networks. The US chose not to define a single mandatory cellular standard for use with this frequency. As a result, there are currently three different and incompatible standards in the US that are deployed in the 1900MHz range: TDMA, CDMA and GSM. All 1900MHz digital cellular networks (using any standard) are generally referred to as "PCS". TDMA is now considered to be obsolete and is gradually being replaced by GSM.
The 850MHz band is also available for cellular communications in the US. If I remember correctly, this freqency was already used for analog networks before digital cellular technology was introduced.
Digital technology offers many advantages over analog technology (security, bandwidth utilization efficiency, data services, quality of service). Therefore, cellular network providers desired to upgrade their analog networks to digital networks as much and quickly as possible. The 850Mhz licenses were still valuable, since the companies had payed a lot of money for them, and because lower frequencies offer a greater range (with the same transmitting power) than higher frequencies. In practice that means that a 850MHz network would require less antennas than a 1900MHz network within the same area of coverage.
Because of this, the GSM850 (sub)standard was officially ratified. This allowed GSM technology to be deployed in 850MHz networks.
One thing I did notice was that the major cellular phone manufacturers have sofar been slow with introducing 850MHz-compatibility in their new models.
Of course, it took some years for triband phones (900MHz/1800MHz/1900MHz) to become generally available, providing reasonable coverage in North America and excellent coverage in most of the rest of the world.
As far as I know, there are still no quadband phones (800MHz/850MHz/1800MHz/1900MHz), although I'm sure that that will be simply a matter of time. Those would be the ultimate roaming phones for frequent transatlantic travellers.
The only two countries with mobile networks that don't have any GSM coverage are South-Korea and Japan.
Re:N-Gage? (Score:2)
Its probably not too much of a problem.