VV(^^)VV_____OFFICIAL ANDROID OS/DEVICE THREAD_____VV(^^)VV

What Carrier are you currently using?

  • AT&T

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Verizon

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Sprint

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • T-Mobile

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Metro PCS

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Cricket

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • U.S. Cellular

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Straight Talk

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    0
  • Poll closed .
Nobody talking about the HTC Sensation Beats XL?

sensationxl2011-10-05600px-16.jpg

sensationxl2011-10-05600px-6.jpg


1.5Ghz Single Core Snapdragon
4.7' Super LCD Screen
WVGA 480x800
9.9mm Thick
720p Video Recording
Beats Audio Sound System Built-In
Not coming to America.
 
Nobody talking about the HTC Sensation Beats XL?

sensationxl2011-10-05600px-16.jpg

sensationxl2011-10-05600px-6.jpg


1.5Ghz Single Core Snapdragon
4.7' Super LCD Screen
WVGA 480x800
9.9mm Thick
720p Video Recording
Beats Audio Sound System Built-In
Not coming to America.
 
IHeartBoost wrote:
Nobody talking about the HTC Sensation Beats XL?

1.5Ghz Single Core Snapdragon
4.7' Super LCD Screen
WVGA 480x800
9.9mm Thick
720p Video Recording
Beats Audio Sound System Built-In
Not coming to America.

No.
 
IHeartBoost wrote:
Nobody talking about the HTC Sensation Beats XL?

1.5Ghz Single Core Snapdragon
4.7' Super LCD Screen
WVGA 480x800
9.9mm Thick
720p Video Recording
Beats Audio Sound System Built-In
Not coming to America.

No.
 
Originally Posted by airblaster503

IHeartBoost wrote:
Nobody talking about the HTC Sensation Beats XL?

1.5Ghz Single Core Snapdragon
4.7' Super LCD Screen
WVGA 480x800
9.9mm Thick
720p Video Recording
Beats Audio Sound System Built-In
Not coming to America.

No.

And
4.7' Super LCD Screen
WVGA 480x800
grin.gif
 
Originally Posted by airblaster503

IHeartBoost wrote:
Nobody talking about the HTC Sensation Beats XL?

1.5Ghz Single Core Snapdragon
4.7' Super LCD Screen
WVGA 480x800
9.9mm Thick
720p Video Recording
Beats Audio Sound System Built-In
Not coming to America.

No.

And
4.7' Super LCD Screen
WVGA 480x800
grin.gif
 
I agree that HTC is really meh in every aspect other than the construction of their phones.But that Nexus Ice Cream Sandwich phone though
pimp.gif
 
I agree that HTC is really meh in every aspect other than the construction of their phones.But that Nexus Ice Cream Sandwich phone though
pimp.gif
 
Sprint's shaking it up again. Looks to be a good move...

[h4]
[/h4][h4]Sprint converts its CDMA network to LTE, plans 'aggressive rollout' to be completed by 2013[/h4]
By Joseph Volpe posted Oct 7th 2011 9:58AM

Breaking News


We knew more or less that an announcement of this sort was coming. Back in July, Dan Hesse had teased us face-to-face with the promise of a "great story this fall around 4G," and now the time to tell that tale has arrived. At its strategy event today, Sprint finally went public with plans to "simplify its network" by converting its CDMA 1900MHz holdings and LightSquared's 1600MHZ spectrum ("pending FCC approval") to LTE, an industry favorite. Helping the operator make that transition is the swathe of 800MHz spectrum it reclaimed from the, now defunct, iDEN push-to-talk network -- which had been a drain on the company's resources. This spectrum, acquired from Nextel, will be phased out by mid-2013 and rolled into LTE. The company plans for a rapid deployment of this new 4G, with the first LTE markets and handsets to hit in mid-2012 with the full rollout mostly completed by 2013. Current subscribers signed up for WiMAX plans won't have to worry as their devices will continue to be supported throughout 2012.

Beginning tomorrow, Sprint's consolidating its 4G LTE (including LightSquared), 3G and Direct Connect networks into one single architecture. All the major technical milestones, such as test calls and field integration, have cleared their hurdles and work on over 22,00 cell sites are currently in process. Samsung, Alcatel Lucent and Ericsson have partnered with Sprint to install multimode 3G and 4G base stations to handle the network's future traffic. Prospective iPhone 4S users on the network will be able to take advantage of better signal strength and improved voice service as Sprint intends to also offload the latter onto 800MHz.

Expect a steep "reduction in roaming costs" and deeper penetration throughout the operator's expanding national footprint over the course of the next two years. Naturally, LTE speeds will be significantly improved over the currently in-use WiMAX. By the end of next year, Sprint aims to have a combined WiMAX/LTE population coverage of 176 million -- with 123 million covered by LTE and 76 million overlapping both. When the network build-out is nearly complete in 2013, the company should have over 250 million blanketed in LTE, far outstripping the stagnant 120 million served by WiMAX.

...Developing

Also...Sprint's LTE plans detailed: phones, tablets and modems coming by 2012

One more...Samsung and Google event postponed
 
Sprint's shaking it up again. Looks to be a good move...

[h4]
[/h4][h4]Sprint converts its CDMA network to LTE, plans 'aggressive rollout' to be completed by 2013[/h4]
By Joseph Volpe posted Oct 7th 2011 9:58AM

Breaking News


We knew more or less that an announcement of this sort was coming. Back in July, Dan Hesse had teased us face-to-face with the promise of a "great story this fall around 4G," and now the time to tell that tale has arrived. At its strategy event today, Sprint finally went public with plans to "simplify its network" by converting its CDMA 1900MHz holdings and LightSquared's 1600MHZ spectrum ("pending FCC approval") to LTE, an industry favorite. Helping the operator make that transition is the swathe of 800MHz spectrum it reclaimed from the, now defunct, iDEN push-to-talk network -- which had been a drain on the company's resources. This spectrum, acquired from Nextel, will be phased out by mid-2013 and rolled into LTE. The company plans for a rapid deployment of this new 4G, with the first LTE markets and handsets to hit in mid-2012 with the full rollout mostly completed by 2013. Current subscribers signed up for WiMAX plans won't have to worry as their devices will continue to be supported throughout 2012.

Beginning tomorrow, Sprint's consolidating its 4G LTE (including LightSquared), 3G and Direct Connect networks into one single architecture. All the major technical milestones, such as test calls and field integration, have cleared their hurdles and work on over 22,00 cell sites are currently in process. Samsung, Alcatel Lucent and Ericsson have partnered with Sprint to install multimode 3G and 4G base stations to handle the network's future traffic. Prospective iPhone 4S users on the network will be able to take advantage of better signal strength and improved voice service as Sprint intends to also offload the latter onto 800MHz.

Expect a steep "reduction in roaming costs" and deeper penetration throughout the operator's expanding national footprint over the course of the next two years. Naturally, LTE speeds will be significantly improved over the currently in-use WiMAX. By the end of next year, Sprint aims to have a combined WiMAX/LTE population coverage of 176 million -- with 123 million covered by LTE and 76 million overlapping both. When the network build-out is nearly complete in 2013, the company should have over 250 million blanketed in LTE, far outstripping the stagnant 120 million served by WiMAX.

...Developing

Also...Sprint's LTE plans detailed: phones, tablets and modems coming by 2012

One more...Samsung and Google event postponed
 
Back
Top Bottom