First, we should define 4G.
In the US, depending on the carrier, we have at least 3 types of 4G or pseudo-4G.
LTE - This is true 4G, and also the fastest of the options. Verizon has the biggest LTE network, followed AT&T, Sprint is bringing up the rear, and T-Mobile has no LTE at this time (coming in 2013). There are also other smaller carriers that offer LTE. Straight Talk does not have LTE at this time. Speeds are 10MB/s down avg, 30MB/s down peak.
WiMAX - Only offered by Sprint (and a few smaller carriers), but not offered by Straight Talk. It's faster than 3G but slower than LTE (LTE has average speeds that are 2-3x faster (up to 6x faster peak speeds). Speeds are 3MB/s down avg, 6-10MB/s down peak.
HSDPA - Pseudo-4G, it can be as fast as WiMAX in certain markets, but is not as fast as LTE. Offered by AT&T, T-Mobile, a lot of smaller carriers, and Straight Talk. Speeds are 1-3MB/s down avg, 6-8MB/s down peak.
Most smartphones made in the last year for AT&T/T-Mobile will have HSDPA. Some like the Galaxy S3 will have HSDPA and LTE, so using it on Straight Talk will default to HSDPA.
:whiste:First, we should define 4G.
In the US, depending on the carrier, we have at least 3 types of 4G or pseudo-4G.
LTE - This is true 4G, and also the fastest of the options. Verizon has the biggest LTE network, followed AT&T, Sprint is bringing up the rear, and T-Mobile has no LTE at this time (coming in 2013). There are also other smaller carriers that offer LTE. Straight Talk does not have LTE at this time. Speeds are 10MB/s down avg, 30MB/s down peak.
WiMAX - Only offered by Sprint (and a few smaller carriers), but not offered by Straight Talk. It's faster than 3G but slower than LTE (LTE has average speeds that are 2-3x faster (up to 6x faster peak speeds). Speeds are 3MB/s down avg, 6-10MB/s down peak.
HSDPA - Pseudo-4G, it can be as fast as WiMAX in certain markets, but is not as fast as LTE. Offered by AT&T, T-Mobile, a lot of smaller carriers, and Straight Talk. Speeds are 1-3MB/s down avg, 6-8MB/s down peak.
Most smartphones made in the last year for AT&T/T-Mobile will have HSDPA. Some like the Galaxy S3 will have HSDPA and LTE, so using it on Straight Talk will default to HSDPA.
So what technology does Straight Talk have? They say they have 4g.
So what technology does Straight Talk have? They say they have 4g.
I see nowhere where ST claims to offer 4G. They put you on AT&T's HSPA network, beyond that they make no guarantees of HSPA+ or 4G. With that said I use their service and have seen up to about 4-4.5 Mbps and am happy with it.
First, we should define 4G.
In the US, depending on the carrier, we have at least 3 types of 4G or pseudo-4G.
LTE - This is true 4G, and also the fastest of the options. Verizon has the biggest LTE network, followed AT&T, Sprint is bringing up the rear, and T-Mobile has no LTE at this time (coming in 2013). There are also other smaller carriers that offer LTE. Straight Talk does not have LTE at this time. Speeds are 10MB/s down avg, 30MB/s down peak.
WiMAX - Only offered by Sprint (and a few smaller carriers), but not offered by Straight Talk. It's faster than 3G but slower than LTE (LTE has average speeds that are 2-3x faster (up to 6x faster peak speeds). Speeds are 3MB/s down avg, 6-10MB/s down peak.
HSDPA - Pseudo-4G, it can be as fast as WiMAX in certain markets, but is not as fast as LTE. Offered by AT&T, T-Mobile, a lot of smaller carriers, and Straight Talk. Speeds are 1-3MB/s down avg, 6-8MB/s down peak.
Most smartphones made in the last year for AT&T/T-Mobile will have HSDPA. Some like the Galaxy S3 will have HSDPA and LTE, so using it on Straight Talk will default to HSDPA.
So what technology does Straight Talk have? They say they have 4g.
Does this mean Boost mobile and Virgin Mobile's 4g is WiMAX? I believe they both use Sprints network.
Well damn what do you expect, the first reply laid it out
Ok not sure why you are getting butturt over a light humor comment, points stands jpeyton laid it out not sure how you cant understand it
Wrong. No currently deployed technology meets the original definition of "4g". Furthermore, DC-HSPA+ on T-Mobile can be just as fast or faster than current versions of LTE (though not as good on latency).First, we should define 4G.
In the US, depending on the carrier, we have at least 3 types of 4G or pseudo-4G.
LTE - This is true 4G
Sprint has been behind for so long with 4G it is shameful. Especially with a $10 MONTHLY premium data charge!:sneaky:
I live about 20 MINTUES north of LTE service and recently purchased the Galaxy Note II. Debating returning the device as Sprint service has declined severely over the past year. Absolutely horrible service. The Galaxy Note II is a fabulous device but it is near useless without WiFi.
Meanwhile AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon all have 4G or LTE in my area, actually right in my neighborhood!
Have considered Straighttalk but wasn't sure if the service would be any better. Any suggestions?
First, we should define 4G.
In the US, depending on the carrier, we have at least 3 types of 4G or pseudo-4G.
LTE - This is true 4G, and also the fastest of the options. Verizon has the biggest LTE network, followed AT&T, Sprint is bringing up the rear, and T-Mobile has no LTE at this time (coming in 2013). There are also other smaller carriers that offer LTE. Straight Talk does not have LTE at this time. Speeds are 10MB/s down avg, 30MB/s down peak.
WiMAX - Only offered by Sprint (and a few smaller carriers), but not offered by Straight Talk. It's faster than 3G but slower than LTE (LTE has average speeds that are 2-3x faster (up to 6x faster peak speeds). Speeds are 3MB/s down avg, 6-10MB/s down peak.
HSDPA - Pseudo-4G, it can be as fast as WiMAX in certain markets, but is not as fast as LTE. Offered by AT&T, T-Mobile, a lot of smaller carriers, and Straight Talk. Speeds are 1-3MB/s down avg, 6-8MB/s down peak.
Most smartphones made in the last year for AT&T/T-Mobile will have HSDPA. Some like the Galaxy S3 will have HSDPA and LTE, so using it on Straight Talk will default to HSDPA.
I connect on HSPA+ all the time on straight talk. In theory its like 18 down on ATT and something like 42 on Tmobile. Not that you ever get those speeds.
The main issue with straight talk is that you'll get booted if you use more than about 2gb a month or more than 100mb a day for several days. If you're a heavy data user straight talk isn't for you anyways.
From what I have heard, you only get kicked off of Straight Talk if you are using AT&T Straight Talk. Tmobile doesn't seem to have any data restrictions at all, as people use ridiculous amounts. At least that is what people say. Many claim to be using 20-70gb a month in data without even being throttled.