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IntoMobile's 3G vs EDGE webpage load-time shootout - just how slow is the iPhone?
3g | 8925 | apple | cingular/at&t | data | edge | htc | iphone | kaiser | load | research | speeds | tilt | time | tytnRight, we all know just how much faster 3G data speeds are in comparison to EDGE speeds. Theoretical speeds are one thing, straight-up throughput numbers are impressive, but what about the most important aspect of any device’s wireless data connection - actual web-browsing performance? Unless you’re one of the harder-core mobile warriors that uses their mobile phone as a wireless modem (tethered to a laptop), chances are your cellphone’s data connection is predominantly used to serve up webpages on your handset’s display. So, just how much faster does a 3G data connection allow you to surf the web? Or, conversely, just how much does the iPhone’s EDGE-only data connection slow down the web-surfing experience? (Hint: not that slow) Well, we set to find out exactly what kind of load-times you can expect in real-world situations and with real-world devices. For this test we used an AT&T Tilt 8925 ( HTC Kaiser TyTn II ) on AT&T’s 3G network, and squared it off against an Apple iPhone on AT&T’s EDGE network. Webpage load-times were the focus of this test, and load-times were rounded down to the nearest second. Load-times were recorded from the moment the page started to load until the status-bar indicated that the page was finished loading (until the progress indicator-bar disappeared). Hit the link for the video. Hypothesis: Webpage load-times are bottlenecked by the device’s processing power and page-rendering technology. This should result in similar load-times between the iPhone and the Tilt. Results: What we found was completely expected. There’s more at play then just throughput. The iPhone’s web-kit based Safari browser allowed it to load pages almost as fast as the AT&T Tilt. We used the Pocket Internet Explorer that comes pre-installed on the Windows Mobile 6.0 Professional-based AT&T Tilt - and it proved to be the device’s downfall. Both devices had similar processor speeds, so that aspect was fairly controlled for in this test. Check out the video below to get an idea for real-world load-times. Summary:
- The AT&T Tilt loaded the ShopBop.com webpage in 37 seconds, whereas the iPhone took a whole 26 seconds.
- IntoMobile.com took 51 seconds to load on the Tilt and 83 seconds on the iPhone.
- Load-times for CalBar.com were the most comparable - 15 seconds on the HTC Kaiser and 18 seconds on the iPhone.
HTC announces Windows Mobile 6.0 upgrade for AT&T 8525
8525 | announcements | applications | at&t | att | cingular/at&t | htc | tytn | upgrade | windows mobileIf you’re an AT&T 8525 (HTC TyTn Hermes) owner, then you’ve probably been drooling over the launch of the HTC Kaiser TyTn II in the US as the AT&T Tilt . But, if you’ve been envious of the AT&T Tilt 8925 for its Windows Mobile 6.0 Professional OS, HTC’s got your back. Our favorite little ODM-turned-smartphone-giant has just released an official Windows Mobile 6.0 Professional ROM for all AT&T 8525’s. The WM6 upgrade is finally available for free and should help you deal with the little green devil sitting on your shoulder (ours kept telling us to go get an AT&T Tilt 8925…until we gave in and got one). The AT&T 8925 Tilt still has the upper hand in terms of features - 3 megapixel autofocus camera, tilting screen, integrated GPS - but if the freshness of WinMo6 is all your AT&T 8525 TyTn needs, then head on over to HTC’s download page and get crazy. That is, if you haven’t already gotten the AT&T 8525 WinMo6 ROM from xda-developers. Just back up your data before said craziness. The flashing that WM6 Pro ROM will wipe your data. HTC download page ---Related Articles at IntoMobile:Cingular 8525 get's re-branded - AT&T 8525Cingular / AT&T 8525 upgrade availableDopod to follow HTC; Announces Windows Mobile 6 upgrade strategyOfficial AT&T Windows Mobile 6.0 ROM for Cingular/ATT 8525 (HTC Hermes)!HTC S620 gets down with Windows Mobile 6.0 - finally

