onlysublime
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- Jun 24, 2013
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It's funny that I own the two Windows Phones that are last to the party (521 and Icon). Thanks Verizon and T-Mobile.
I think your message had just as much emphasis in what you said even if you didn't have the caps. It just looked silly to me. I appreciate you hammering the forums and getting people to spread the word. I made a Twitter account just so i could ask about Cyan at least once per day haha!
For me, I guess, the handwriting should be on the wall with T-Mobile. They took forever to update my 925 & 521 to Black and now taking forever to update to Cyan. I think I'll be moving in to AT&T from henceforth; at least the AT&T Lumia 925 has received the Cyan update.
Question to anyone more technologically knowledgeable than me: Would any of this have to do with most of T-Mobile, Verizon and Sprint's devices being carrier unique phones that don't exist elsewhere in the world?
Probably not. Unfortunately the carrier unique trend with these carriers will probably continue as all three of these carriers use tech that does not adhere to the world standard of GSM (-Japan). At&t uses the same standard as the rest of the world so they will likely always have the edge in WP options and even if they don't have it buying a WP from Europe will work on at&t with everything working perfect except possibly Lte frequency as is more area specific.Question to anyone more technologically knowledgeable than me: Would any of this have to do with most of T-Mobile, Verizon and Sprint's devices being carrier unique phones that don't exist elsewhere in the world?
Probably not. Unfortunately the carrier unique trend with these carriers will probably continue as all three of these carriers use tech that does not adhere to the world standard of GSM (-Japan). At&t uses the same standard as the rest of the world so they will likely always have the edge in WP options and even if they don't have it buying a WP from Europe will work on at&t with everything working perfect except possibly Lte frequency as is more area specific.
Define "world standard." Here is a map of worldwide CDMA coverage. CDMA is not just in the USA. Though it is the standard used by most Americans. If you take a look China is also a country who uses CDMA. I will say this, CDMA is on its way out here in the US. As Verizon and now Sprint transition more and more to LTE. In the next 5-10 years, you'll probably not be able to buy a CDMA phone, including basic, non-smart, phones.