View Single Post
Old 12-17-2009, 12:53 PM   #33
Kalenn
Fan of all things Camaro
 
Kalenn's Avatar
 
Drives: '13 Mercedes-Benz C250 Sport
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Oregon
Posts: 358
Quote:
Originally Posted by The_Blur View Post
Who has a link to that fanboy thread?


The reason for my statement is this: Many years ago I had AT&T for both work and home use. I live in Oregon and used to travel I-5 daily on my commute to work. Now, I-5 has many cell towers that follow the interstate so there should be no reason for dropped calls. I understand that not every tower is an AT&T tower or perhaps AT&T didn't have any equipment in one tower or another. I get that. But when you're driving down I-5 during off-peak hours and calls drop like rain... there's a problem. I worked with the AT&T folks for months to get a resolution. Bought new phones, installed an external antenna on my car that was hard wired to my hands free kit. Even had my audio guy install a new hands free kit. Still nothing worked. Calls kept dropping. I finally was fed up and tried T-Mobile for a while, which was better but still had issues. Switched to Verizon four years ago and have never had a problem since. I still get dropped calls but only about one or two every couple of months instead of one or two every phone call.

As far as the iPhone thing goes, I seem to recall reading somewhere that Verizon passed on it because of the bandwidth requirements or something like that? I don't remember specifically why but that sticks in my mind for some reason.

Every network is different and the level of service from town to town is different. If you're getting great service from AT&T then that's great.
__________________
"Ladies and gentlemen take my advice. Pull down your pants, and slide on the ice."

"E for electricity... V For Chevy Volt and me!"
Kalenn is offline   Reply With Quote