C
cameo
- Jan 1, 1970
- 0
Ever since my T-Mobile Amaze 4G phone was updated from Gingerbread to
ICS version of the Android OS, I've been having very unreliable data
reception (3G/4G) with both mobile network or WiFi operation. The data
connection would work for a couple minutes, then stop for a couple
minutes, and start all over again the same cycle. During the stop the
data indicator icon on the top of the screen would also stop flashing.
First I thought that maybe the radio chips generate too much heat and
when they reach a critical temp, they shut off till they cool down
again. (I've had similar behavior with my HP notebook whose Nvidia
graphics chip tended to over heat under heavy use. Reflowing the
soldering on that GPU chip and improving its heat minimized the problem.)
But then recently I noticed that when my phone's WiFi was connected to a
restaurant's slow network, the WiFi connection, though slow, seemed
steady. Then it occured to me that the problem is perhaps software
related where the communication buffer of this Android version cannot
process the data network packets fast enough on a faster network, but
can keep up with them on a slower one. Note, the older Gingerbread OS
didn't have this problem.
I only dabble in software (app level only,) and not in electronics, so I
though I ask your opinion about what might be going on here.
Thanks.
ICS version of the Android OS, I've been having very unreliable data
reception (3G/4G) with both mobile network or WiFi operation. The data
connection would work for a couple minutes, then stop for a couple
minutes, and start all over again the same cycle. During the stop the
data indicator icon on the top of the screen would also stop flashing.
First I thought that maybe the radio chips generate too much heat and
when they reach a critical temp, they shut off till they cool down
again. (I've had similar behavior with my HP notebook whose Nvidia
graphics chip tended to over heat under heavy use. Reflowing the
soldering on that GPU chip and improving its heat minimized the problem.)
But then recently I noticed that when my phone's WiFi was connected to a
restaurant's slow network, the WiFi connection, though slow, seemed
steady. Then it occured to me that the problem is perhaps software
related where the communication buffer of this Android version cannot
process the data network packets fast enough on a faster network, but
can keep up with them on a slower one. Note, the older Gingerbread OS
didn't have this problem.
I only dabble in software (app level only,) and not in electronics, so I
though I ask your opinion about what might be going on here.
Thanks.