Verizon’s Samsung Saga hands-on

We spent a few brief moments with Samsung’s dual-mode Saga for Verizon recently, and let’s just put it this way: our reaction wasn’t what we’d expected. Head on over to Engadget Mobile for the pictures — oh, those glorious pictures — and our quick take!

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Verizon’s Samsung Saga hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Jan 2009 11:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC’s 2009 haul seemingly leaked, packs all sorts of gorgeous

It’s no secret that HTC wants to step up its Android game, and if this new stuff is to be believed, 2009’s shaping up to be a banner year. Some cat over on PPCGeeks seems to have leaked a pretty believable ’09 roadmap for HTC, showing tons of glorious hardware that appears — at least on the surface — to go toe-to-toe with the best Palm, Apple, and the rest of the gang can bring to the table. AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint all have dedicated stuff in here, including a “Jasper” that looks to combine the Touch HD with the Touch Pro, a successor to the monster Athena called “Ihoth,” and this little guy, a garishly pink Android handset dubbed “Hero.” We’d expect at least some of these to be announced at MWC next month, so we don’t have long to wait — assuming they’re real, of course.

[Via wmpoweruser.com]

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HTC’s 2009 haul seemingly leaked, packs all sorts of gorgeous originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Jan 2009 12:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon Deal Brings CBS Shows to V CAST Subscribers

verizon-v-cast.jpg

Verizon and CBS Corporation on Monday announced a deal that will bring full-length CBS programming to Verizon V CAST subscribers. Verizon now has the mobile rights to broadcast shows like 60 Minutes to customers who subscribe to its V CAST mobile video service.

The deal also includes the national, video on-demand rights – in standard and high-definition – for shows like CSI, NCIS, Survivor, and Numb3rs. Verizon will also continue to offer CBS programming via its FiOS TV video service.

“Verizon subscribers will have continued access to [CBS] not only through FiOS TV, but also through V CAST on the mobile phone, which enhances our profile on a key emerging platform,” Leslie Moonves, president and CEO of BS Corporation, said in a statement.

Verizon Completes Alltel Acquisition

verizon%20alltel.jpgVerizon Wireless has completed its $5.9 billion acquisition of Alltel, making it the largest cell phone company in the U.S., according to the Associated Press. Verizon said that it will also take on $22.2 billion in debt from the company (which explains the original $28.1 billion acquisition figure announced last June).

Much of Alltel’s executive staff will be axed—probably on the order of 3,000 employees—but everyone below that level will be retained in the merger. “Alltel employees below executive level will continue in their present jobs as Verizon Wireless assesses staffing needs required to best serve customers and achieve synergies,” Verizon said in a statement.

As part of the deal, Verizon also gets Alltel’s 12.9 million customers, bringing its U.S. total to 83.7 million (after about 2.1 million get sold off in territory that will be sold later). That puts it significantly above AT&T’s current 75 million-ish total, which has been bolstered recently by the runaway success of the iPhone. Verizon plans to change out the Alltel name in stores over the second and third quarters of this year.

Verizon completes Alltel acquisition, now covers 83.7 million customers as nation’s largest wireless network

As promised, Verizon and Alltel tied the knot today, in a $5.9 billion acquisition, plus $22.9 billion of Alltel debt. Combined they form the nation’s largest wireless carrier, with 83.7 customers (12.9 of those from the Alltel fold). For the time being, Alltel customers can sit tight and continue to use their devices and service plans as usual, with re-branding operations to happen Q2 and Q3 of 2009.

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Verizon completes Alltel acquisition, now covers 83.7 million customers as nation’s largest wireless network originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Jan 2009 10:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon and Alltel to join in holy matrimony January 9th

Following a good half year of courtship while the regulatory miscellany ran its course, Verizon’s finally ready to take the plunge and call this $5.9 billion deal done. The combined juggernaut will amass a staggering 78 million subscribers, putting it roughly 3 million ahead of its closest rival, AT&T, though it’ll do so at the cost of assuming some $22.9 billion in Alltel debt. Ultimately, the merger means some positions at Alltel headquarters in Little Rock, Arkansas will get axed — but hey, AT&T Mobility HQ’s just a stone’s throw away in Atlanta, so Verizon’s headcount loss could ultimately be AT&T’s gain.

[Via Phone Scoop]

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Verizon and Alltel to join in holy matrimony January 9th originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 04 Jan 2009 22:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon Introduces New Prepaid Options

Samsung_Juke_Verizon.jpgNot wanting to let a lucrative market opportunity get away from them, Verizon Wireless has expanded its prepaid offerings by letting customers pay a per-day access fee, according to FierceWireless.

The new plans break down as follows: the “Core” plan costs 99 cents per day, and offers unlimited in-network calling and 10-cents-per-minute calls everywhere else. The “Plus” plan, meanwhile, costs $1.99 per day but bundles in free night calling. Finally, the “Power” plan (cue explosive sound effect) costs $2.99 per day and also includes free weekend calling.

For all three plans, text messages cost 10 cents each, MMS messages are a quarter a pop, and out-of-network calls are 10 cents per minute. The report said that prepaid users can also sign up for Verizon’s various media-related services, including VZ Navigator and V CAST.

The Definitive Coast-to-Coast 3G Data Test

After a grueling eight-city coast-to-coast test of the 3G networks run by AT&T, Sprint and Verizon, we’ve come up with some clear-cut test results. Think you know who has the best network? Think again.

The Test
3G is more important now than ever before. Obviously, AT&T made a big push over the summer to augment 3G for the arrival of the updated iPhone, but almost every smartphone and most standard phones in the three largest cell networks runs on a supposedly fast 3G network, and T-Mobile’s 3G network is in the works. The technology can, at least on paper, rival home broadband. AT&T’s HSPA network, for instance, is supposed to deliver data at up to 3.6Mbps downstream, while letting you upload at 1.4Mbps. Meanwhile, the EVDO Rev. A that Sprint and Verizon use promises a comparable “burst rate” of 3Mbps up, with 1.5Mbps down.

Like a lot of business travelers, we bloggy types have a particular interest in 3G USB dongles, since we’re often trying to file stories far away from any decent wi-fi. Figuring out who has the best service quickly becomes a fixation, which becomes an obsession, which, as usual, becomes an ultimate Battlemodo.

In lieu of jetsetting all around the country, we FedExed our testing package from one staffer’s home to the next, until we’d hit eight of the country’s biggest cities. In each city, testers were instructed to put the three cards—one each from AT&T Sprint and Verizon—through some pretty rigorous paces. (Note: In case you’re wondering why T-Mobile isn’t represented, the carrier doesn’t yet have the coverage required, nor does it yet offer 3G USB dongles or cards like the ones we used in testing. Next year, maybe.)

The testers chose three to five locations (preferably including one suburban spot). Parking themselves somewhere, they would connect each card to the laptop, running Speakeasy’s bandwidth test five times for each device, and then follow it up with an auxiliary battery of repeated pageload and file download tests, in order to verify Speakeasy’s readings.

The Gear
The USB dongles we used for testing were typical 3G cards from the carriers: AT&T’s Sierra USBConnect 881, Sprint’s Sierra Wireless Compass 597 and Verizon Wireless’s Novatel USB727. We used both a Lenovo and a MacBook Pro, but at any given time the cards were being tested on one or the other, in order to keep hardware from being a comparative issue. (After all this extensive testing, we don’t think results have much to do with your platform or laptop of choice—even the USB dongles’ antennae didn’t have as much relevance as sheer position to cell tower.)

While it may sound like hopping around town testing cards is easy, rest assured it was plenty challenging. Any test where any of the three cards wasn’t playing well with a laptop, and the whole test had to be scrapped. This may not be a clean-room lab study, but we kept firm to our methods and the results speak to that. There’s a reason this may be the most information anyone has gathered, independently, on the subject.

Download Performance
As far as download performance goes, Sprint won overall, beating AT&T five cities to three, and handily beating Verizon in four cities while losing close contests in four more. To round it out, Verizon beat AT&T in four cities, tied in one, and lost in three.
These results aren’t so random when you plot them on the map. Besides proving that Sprint is a serious contender in almost any location—and should be taken seriously as a 3G and 4G data service provider, no matter what your feelings are about its basic phone service—we have confirmed what we thought, that the regional Bell heavies (and the former GTE) hold their own where their real estate holdings are most vast.

AT&T had troubles in the Northeast and Chicago, but down the coast in Raleigh and over in Austin, it’s probably no surprise that the southern Bell conglomerate came out victorious. On the West Coast, it was a toss-up except in Portland, where Verizon couldn’t quite keep it together.

Upload Performance
What are more surprising are the upload performance results: AT&T totally kicked ass here, winning six cities and barely losing to Sprint in the other two. Verizon was the slowpoke here, though it did nudge Sprint out of the way twice, and beat it soundly once.
Although the same regional attributes crop up here—AT&T is at its weakest in Boston and Chicago—AT&T clearly has a technological edge with HSUPA. Well, it’s either that or all of the 3G build-out meant to lure iPhone 3G customers has left the carrier with an awful lot of unused upstream bandwidth, since smartphone users download a lot more than they upload. (This is assuming that upstream and downstream operate independently, as they seemed to in AT&T’s case.)

Even when the download performance was crappy, AT&T’s upload talents shined through, indicating that the congestion argument could hold merit. So, for the time being anyway, if you’re into sending big files, or running some kind of masochistic mobile torrent service, AT&T is the right choice.

The Cities
Want to check out your city or region? Have a look at the eight contestants in this round, and while you’re at it, you’ll get to know a little more about the Giz staffers who took time to test the gear. If we didn’t get to your town this time around, don’t fret—maybe we’ll get to it next year…or when we eventually test LTE vs. WiMax.

Austin
Boston
Chicago
New York City
Portland
Raleigh-Durham
San Francisco and the Bay Area
Seattle

Thanks to Mark, Sean, Andi, Eric and Jack for testing. Special shout-out to Mahoney for helping put together the testing regimen and instructions, and to my brilliant wife for working her Excel bar-graphing magic on our unwieldy spreadsheets .