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On the longevity of the iPhone 5, I think it will be fine to use for at least 3 years. It already has the latest cellular data technology in LTE and this will likely be the standard for the next 5 years as most carriers are still expanding their initial LTE network rollouts. Apple is known for supporting devices that are up to 3 generations old so you'll probably still get regular updates well into 2015. The screen is perfectly sized and it has a very fast processor, GPU, and significant RAM. I plan to keep mine at least 2 years as it seems most smartphones these days are just bumping up specs rather than new killer must have features. If I upgrade before then it will just be because of the tech geek in me itching to have the latest device. |
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iphone can't get any thinner, the bendgate is proof of that, the resolution can't get any higher than retina, no point. The camera can't get much better, physical size limits that. Processors don't need to get anybetter, too hard on battery life. Only place they can improve on, and this will be great but won't get anybody excited is battery life. They can definately improve batterylife to two days with lower voltage chips, better display tech and better battery tech. But the R&D won't payoff in the end unfortunately. People are content with 8-10 hour battery life. |
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#56 | |
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The only feature missing is LTE, but no customer should be force to pay extra for it.
__________________
2010 13" MBP (240GB SSD) | iPad 4 16GB (AT&T) | Apple TV (3rd Gen) 0_o
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Again, the level of service on an MVNO is not the same as with the primary carrier - the carriers themselves ensure this - and if you find yourself on a congested network, you will see the results for yourself. For many people this is fine - but for others, whose livelihood depends on a reliable phone service, and/or who travel internationally regularly, the small amount of extra cost is really trivial. |
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#58 | ||
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Quote:
__________________
2010 13" MBP (240GB SSD) | iPad 4 16GB (AT&T) | Apple TV (3rd Gen) 0_o
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#59 | |
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You really think AT&T and Verizon are giving the same access to MVNO's as their own customers at a fraction of the rate? No, what they do is they sell those operators access to their lines because it allows them to maximize the traffic that their networks are carrying. This is fine most of the time because there is often excess capacity. Who do you think gets bumped first though when the cell becomes congested? The AT&T customer with a $200/month bill or the discount operators who are there only to fill excess capacity when available? |
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#60 |
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"fingerprint reader". lol
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Verizon iPhone 5 - iOS 6.1.3 iPad mini 16GB WiFi - iOS 6.1.3 |
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Nice scare tactic; however, people on ST or Net10 use zero LTE bandwidth from AT&T. When that network chokes and reliability tanks your $200/month phone bill won't save you.
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2010 13" MBP (240GB SSD) | iPad 4 16GB (AT&T) | Apple TV (3rd Gen) 0_o
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