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dmix 6 days ago

What does that mean in practice?

minimaxir 6 days ago | parent | next [-]

The carriers offer a superfast download speed that is based off of mmWave: Verizon for example offers 5G Ultra Wideband: https://www.verizon.com/support/5g-mobile-faqs/

On my current iPhone 13 Pro I can get about 100 Mbps in San Francisco.

Nextgrid 6 days ago | parent | next [-]

I remember having ~150Mbps with an iPhone 8 on LTE in 2017. Bandwidth itself has basically never been the limiting factor for the last decade or so. The problem is always data caps, and unless 5G/mmWave/etc is somehow magically exempt, it's not really a benefit (you can now burn through your monthly quota in seconds instead of minutes - great!).

minimaxir 6 days ago | parent [-]

Unlimited* bandwidth plans are more common nowadays.

coder543 6 days ago | parent | prev [-]

You don't need mmWave for 100Mbps.

I have seen 2+ Gbps over mmWave.

"Regular" 5G can do hundreds of Mbps, maybe even 1 Gbps under ideal conditions.

gsibble 6 days ago | parent | prev [-]

I talked to ChatGPT about it for a while. It says mmWave means you can get 1-3gbps speeds if you're in a covered area. However, most are stadiums, airports, etc.. Verizon has by far the largest coverage, then AT&T.

At least in my daily use, it means nothing. I've also never seen speeds like that when I've tested the phone.