AT&T said Friday that it began deploying HSUPA technology to the HTC Inspire, and would add another HSUPA update for the Motorola Atrix "soon".
"Today, AT&T began to deploy an update for the HTC Inspire(tm) 4G that provides, among other features, the addition of enhanced uplink speed technology (HSUPA)," AT&T's statement said.
"An update that adds HSUPA for the Motorola ATRIX 4G has cleared testing and will be deployed soon," AT&T added. "Updates will roll out to customers of both phones over the coming weeks. Users will get a message on their device notifying them of an update and to connect to Wi-Fi to download it. After downloading it, the user needs to only allow the update to automatically install."
The upgrade will allow upload speeds to be increased to 5.76 Mbit/s - probably not critical for the average user of Twitter or Web surfer, but important for those uploading YouTube videos or other content into the cloud. And who's going to turn down additional throughput, hmm?
AT&T announced the HTC Inspire in February. The HTC Inspire 4G is AT&T's answer to big-screen phones like the HTC EVO 4G ($199.99-$449.99, 4 stars) on Sprint and the Motorola Droid X ($199.99-$569.99, 4.5 stars) on Verizon. PCMag.com's review found the 4G speeds uninspiring, for all of the Android power - and, unfortunately, in our tests it dropped more calls than an iPhone.
By contrast, the sexy Motorola Atrix ($199 with a two-year AT&T contract) is at the forefront of a technology revolution, according to a PCMag.com review. This powerful cell phone that transforms into a laptop or a desktop PC shows us what could very well be the future of mobile computing.
At 2.5 by 4.6 by 0.4 inches (HWD) and 4.8 ounces, the Atrix is clad in smooth black plastic with an attractive fade pattern on the back panel. The 960-by-540 screen is sharper than any other you'll find on a phone, with the exception of Apple's 960-by-640 Retina Display. It's also the first of a family, which will include tablets.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar