Lost_in_the_HTTP
Lifer
^^^ I pay $10 month total.
But no GGGGG and barely GGGG most of the time.
But no GGGGG and barely GGGG most of the time.
A Pixel? Go to settings >Network and Internet.I have a Pixel 6a, wife has a Samsung S22, 4G is much faster than 5G on both, at least in the limited locations I've checked, where both were available.
Verizon.
I have a Pixel 6a, wife has a Samsung S22, 4G is much faster than 5G on both, at least in the limited locations I've checked, where both were available.
Verizon.
Nope.Did you reuse your old SIM cards?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Thanks for trying, but I've already been there, none that.A Pixel? Go to settings >Network and Internet.
Find the SIMS setting which should say Verizon under it. Scroll down and select LTE as preferred network.
Thank me later
Thanks for trying, but I've already been there, none that.
Yes, that is how I get the damn thing to work. On 5G I had about 100K download speed, went into those settings and chose 4G, and speed jumped to 20/Mbps, while sitting in exactly the same spot.
According to "Network Analyzer Pro" app on my phone, the signal strength for 5G and 4G were virtually the same. I was waiting for the wife at her doctor's office, so I had time to play with this.
Thanks for trying, but I've already been there, none that.
Yes, that is how I get the damn thing to work. On 5G I had about 100K download speed, went into those settings and chose 4G, and speed jumped to 20/Mbps, while sitting in exactly the same spot.
According to "Network Analyzer Pro" app on my phone, the signal strength for 5G and 4G were virtually the same. I was waiting for the wife at her doctor's office, so I had time to play with this.
That's why the title of this thread... unless you are in a big metropolitan area, 5G is a just a bunch of hype... and the last fucking place I want to be is in a big metropolitan area... too many people.It's not going to make 5G better. Only the carrier increasing signal strength via more or upgraded equipment (or frequencies) will do that. But this will prevent the phone from even trying to use the 5G network, so you will stay on the faster 4G and save battery as it is not constantly switching/searching for service on a low signal 5G network. If you head to an area with lots of good 5G coverage, just turn it back on.
That's why the title of this thread... unless you are in a big metropolitan area, 5G is a just a bunch of hype... and the last fucking place I want to be is in a big metropolitan area... too many people.
At my home, I don't care, my Wi-Fi is great, and the firewall on my router, plus ad blocking keeps a lot of crap off my phone, and every other device.Unfortunately you're at the mercy of the distance to closest repeaters/towers to your home and the technology Verizon has installed on them.
Beats me. I grew up watching snow on a 13" b&w tv with rabbit ears. I don't understand kids today....but apparently the majority of movies are being formatted for 4k and scaled down to 720p to save bandwidth. I use mobile hotspot on T-Mobile with my Roku so no idea what that looks like for bandwidth since so much is cached....I just know it works and quality is fine.A 4K movie on a 6 inch device... why
I watch 4K movies on a 65" 4K screen.
When attached to 5g I can definitely tell here….
/ran out of data, 6gb for 2.19$! Wtf
What are you doing on your phone that those speeds really matter though? I do all that stuff on the computer. With data caps it's not like you can push heavy data transfers for very long.
We've got 5G UC coverage on T-Mobile where we live. Shit is blazing fast, pushing 250-300Mbps