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In using an iPhone 3Gs for a long time, in a variety of situations, and in
following folklore online, I'm not convinced of this.  There are too many
variables involved.  Is there a faint 3G signal the phone keeps valiantly
pursuing?  Is Bluetooth enabled?  Do have have lots of "push" apps trying to
reach you?  How aggressively have you set your screen dimming?

There is just so much folklore on this, and so little controlled study, that
it's hard to make a definitive claim.  My own experience suggests that the
iPhone, at least, does not optimize between 3G and Wi-Fi, and you're better
off turning Wi-Fi off and leaving it off, turning it on only when you have
some heavy data needs.  In my experience this greatly increases standby
battery time.

For residential uses, AT&T sells a device that acts as a home cell tower,
providing a cell signal to your phone and then using your broadband Internet
connection to carry the traffic.  It's a great deal for AT&T, moving cell
traffic off their network and onto yours.  Over a year ago AT&T explored in
Times Square moving traffic from their cell network to Wi-Fi in Times
Square.  AT&T would love for your broadband or cyber cafe connection to
carry traffic that otherwise their cell network would need to.

If anyone can point to some serious literature on this that'd be good.

/rich

On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 10:56 AM, Gary Schrock <[log in to unmask]> wrote
>
>
>>
> FWIW, my understanding is that using the wifi part of the phone is actually
> more battery efficient than using the cell side.  So if that's an option in
> your building, it's probably the best option. (At least for the smartphone
> people who can't get email, obviously it's not going to help with calls.)
>
> I know in my building I did set my phone up to access the wireless in the
> building, because there's a fair number of places that the cell signal just
> plane sucks.  (Not surprising given the makeup of the building.)
>
>
>  Is there such a thing as a cell repeater that can be placed inside a
>> building? Or some other solution that has worked for folks?
>>
>> Scott Smith
>>
>> HR Systems Development and Support
>>
>> Michigan State University
>>
>>