Dropped Calls? - No Surprise
No matter how many times I use the mark the spot app I think there just going to buy out there way out of poor coverage. 🤣
If you expected better, you bought the wrong phone.
http://support.vzw.com/faqs/VZAccess/faq_natlbrdband ... »
CellStudent said:
If you're on Verizon, you should expect about 800 kbps on a consistent basis.
If you expected better, you bought the wrong phone.
http://support.vzw.com/faqs/VZAccess/faq_natlbrdband ... »
No, I'm currently with ATT. And am starting to think there not going to do anything about their trouble spots until this buy out thing is done with.
pickles said:
lol, they studied 4,000 people. do you have any idea how many people use iPhones? i'll give you a hint, it's a lot more than 4,000. what a ridiculous "study"
Political pollsters question less than 0.001% of all voters in each election cycle, yet their predictions are right more than 90% of the time.
Very small samples can yield very good results when done properly.
If done improperly, even large samples are useless. If they had sampled 1.2 million iPhone users, but only 15 of the responders were Verizon customers- the data would be useless even though the sample size was huge.
Try taking an elementary statistics class before saying stupid things like that.
deepskyblue said:
Do you think polling customers is an accurate way to determine a dropped call rate?
No.
But reality is irrelevant. Perception is what matters.
Polls show opinions. Only opinions. If a large portion of Volvo owners think Volvo's are awesome cars- that matters.
It doesn't matter how good the latest Ford is.
This survey (if accurate) shows nothing more then that AT&T iPhone owners in general think they drop more calls than Verizon iPhone owners.
Only AT&T leadership knows what the dropped call rates are, and whether the iPhone drops more calls than other AT&T handsets.
Good luck getting them to release those numbers.
Not forgetting the network integrity issues that AT&T is famous (infamous) for there is a difference between the devices... the hardware is different...
It is what it is.