Saturday, 26 April 2014

4G and 3G in Pakistan

What is 3G?
3G is shorthand for “3rd generation,” and refers
to a networking standard in cell phone
technology that is capable of providing high-
speed data service to mobile devices. As 3G
wireless networks became more widespread, you
could finally connect to and use the Internet at
practical speeds (with a 3G-enabled
smartphone), which far surpassed those of the
previous generation of mobile phone technology
(called 1X).
Verizon’s 3G network paved the way for a world
that’s almost forgotten phones were once used
merely for voice calls and text messaging. A
world where it’s perfectly ordinary to download
huge chunks of information to your phone from
the Internet, to stream audio and video to
people thousands of miles away, and to
effortlessly, wirelessly pass large multimedia
files to a co-worker.
Indeed, it was 3G that made smartphones truly
feasible. In doing so, it changed the way
millions of people communicate, and set the
stage for even more advanced mobile
technologies such as 4G.
What is 4G?
In one word: fast!
To be technical, 4G stands for “4th generation”
mobile data protocol. But as a growing band of
4G users will tell you, it’s all about the speed.
Now, what is 4G LTE? LTE stands for Long
Term Evolution. It’s a term used for the
particular 4G protocol that delivers the fastest
mobile Internet experience. Some experts even
refer to it as “true 4G.” A 4G LTE network is
therefore one that operates at the leading edge
of speed and reliability.
Using a 4G smartphone on Verizon’s 4G LTE
network means you can download files from the
Internet up to 10 times faster than with 3G.
With 4G LTE, using the web from your phone
becomes as pleasurable as using it from your
home computer.
To join the 4G revolution, you need to have a
smartphone that is configured to work with a
4G network and a mobile plan like MORE
Everything. All 4G phones offered by Verizon will
work with its 4G LTE network, the largest in the
U.S. These phones will connect automatically
with the 4G LTE network, but they can also
connect to and use the 3G network (at 3G
speed) in places where 4G LTE service is not
yet available.
So there you have it. 3G speeds laid the
groundwork for our increasingly mobile lifestyle,
but 4G speeds are truly taking “mobile” to the
next level.

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