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Battery life tests show why Apple skipped 3G on iPhone

“Without a doubt, current 3G implementations do require more space and consume more power than simply outfitting a phone with support for EDGE. Using the Samsung Blackjack as an example, turning on 3G reduces battery life by around 25% under web/email use. The biggest impact of all is, surprisingly enough, talk time; with 3G enabled, the Blackjack’s talk time is cut in half, with absolutely no benefit realized from the higher bandwidth standard,” Anand Lal Shimpi reports for AnandTech.

“At the same time, Apple’s choice to include 802.11b/g support in the iPhone makes a lot of sense. Battery life actually increases with Wi-Fi over EDGE whenever the data connection is being used, not to mention that performance goes up tremendously as well,” Lal Shimpi reports.

“Apple had to make a number of tradeoffs with the iPhone, and without a doubt its power hungry screen was not worth sacrificing, even for better network performance. The iPhone’s biggest selling point is its UI, and Apple seems to have made the right tradeoff by embracing Wi-Fi for the first generation – as frustrating as it may be for users,” Lal Shimpi reports.

“The long term solution however isn’t simply to rely on Wi-Fi hotspots for faster net access, as 3G deployments become even more widespread and technology improves you can expect to see lower power and more tightly integrated 3G chipsets available. We’d venture a guess that a 3G iPhone is at least 12 months out, but until then keep an eye out for 802.11 hotspots – you’ll get a better usage experience and better battery life on your iPhone,” Lal Shimpi reports.

Full article, with tests comparing physical size and power consumption between 3G and EDGE, as well as Wi-Fi and EDGE,, here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “gzero” for the heads up.]

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