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Review

A Day with 3G: How do AT&T, Verizon and Sprint compare?

By Mark Sullivan
June 30, 2009 12:20 AM ET

PC World - Only after the thrill of picking out your new smart phone is over--after you've marveled at all the stylish new gadgetry and features, signed a service contract and finally laid your money down--do you finally get a feel for the speed and reliability of the wireless service that connects your new phone. That wireless service--so often an afterthought to smart phone buyers--is hugely important: it connects your new phone to all the fun and useful apps and services that made you lust after a smart phone in the first place.

The truth is, the 3G wireless networks of today are not perfect (they are, collectively, a work in progress), and they are not all created equal.

Because independent research on these networks is very hard to come by, PC World took a single-day, real-world snapshot of the performance of the three biggest 3G networks in the U.S. -- Verizon Wireless, AT&T and Sprint -- using industry-accepted testing technology and techniques. If there's a smart phone in your future, we hope to give you some idea of the wireless service that may be in store for you, beyond the anecdotal information you hear from other users, on the web and in the media, and aside from the claims made by the wireless service providers themselves.

Now for an important note before we start reviewing our results. Wireless signal, by its nature, is extremely variable; that is, many things, such as obstruction by fixed objects (buildings, trees, etc.), weather, network load, cell tower locations, and time of day, can affect the quality of the signal. These factors can cause service from a single wireless service to vary widely from day to day and from neighborhood to neighborhood. Our results, taken together, provide a snapshot of the performance of the largest 3G networks in 13 major markets during March and early April. But they are by no means exhaustive, and your own connection speeds may differ from ours. Please tell us about your own experience here.

Results: Speed and Reliability Testing by City: Click on this chart to see the detailed results of our testing in 13 cities. The cities are listed in the left-most column; from that column you can move rightward across the chart to read first Verizon's, then Sprint's, and then AT&T's download and upload speed averages for each city. The "reliability" score is the percentage of our tests in which the service maintained an uninterrupted connection at a reasonable speed (faster than dial-up).

During March and early April, our testing partner, Novarum Inc., used Ixia ixChariot testing software to measure network performance from more than twenty fixed locations in each of the following cities: Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Denver, New Orleans, New York City, Orlando (Florida), Phoenix, Portland (Oregon), San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose, and Seattle. In all, our testing partner ran 5443 individual tests from 283 testing locations. At each location, Novarum measured download speed, upload speed, and reliability for each provider's 3G service. (See "How We Tested and What the Ratings Mean.")

Reprinted with permission from PCWorld.com. Story copyright 2010 PC World Communications. All rights reserved.
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