• After 15+ years, we've made a big change: Android Forums is now Early Bird Club. Learn more here.

Houston Newspaper trashes AT&T!

Droidmaniac

Newbie
Jan 21, 2010
39
1
I had just purchased a Galaxy Note a few weeks ago. Speed Tests in Houston fluctuated... connected, not connected.... connected, not connecetd... It would time-out due to "no data connection", but wait 3 seconds and have blazing, mind-numbing speedtests at 45 mb/sec.

Coming from 3G, anything over 5 mb/sec really blew my mind.

Oddly, even in hi-speed 4G LTE areas, some pages would time out and not load at all. I could then walk 3 paces and download a 5 minute video in a flash.

My wife's 3G was consistent and kicked my butt up and down the street.

After a few weeks, back and forth with customer service and multiple techs, sadly, I returned it. Appreciating 3G more than ever now.

Then, I saw this article in the Houston Chronicle. The first few lines of the article say that the article has been updated with ATT rep's confirmation that the problems are now resolved (and the article was softened up a bit as it was originally kinda harsh), but as of Sept 21, I can tell you that speeds and connectivity in Houston still suffer. It's really pitiful.

It seems to me that the 4G signal is sent out in waves or pulses, rather than a steady blanket of coverage.

Anyway, check this out, especially the comments that follow... AT&T’s LTE network in Houston is having connection problems [Updated] | TechBlog | a Chron.com blog
 
  • Like
Reactions: Rico ANDROID
Par for the course. Over the last 9 years I've lived in the Houston area, AT&T's 3G has been pretty reliable (the big exception was after Hurricane Ike as locals may remember) and generally smoother than Verizon's, but Verizon has no competition as far as 4G LTE is concerned in this area. VZW covers more area and is almost always consistently reliable now. AT&T LTE seems to be where Verizon was about 1 1/2 years ago so I assume they'll catch up, just not for some time yet.
 
Upvote 0
I had just purchased a Galaxy Note a few weeks ago. Speed Tests in Houston fluctuated... connected, not connected.... connected, not connecetd... It would time-out due to "no data connection", but wait 3 seconds and have blazing, mind-numbing speedtests at 45 mb/sec.

Coming from 3G, anything over 5 mb/sec really blew my mind.

Oddly, even in hi-speed 4G LTE areas, some pages would time out and not load at all. I could then walk 3 paces and download a 5 minute video in a flash.

My wife's 3G was consistent and kicked my butt up and down the street.

After a few weeks, back and forth with customer service and multiple techs, sadly, I returned it. Appreciating 3G more than ever now.

Then, I saw this article in the Houston Chronicle. The first few lines of the article say that the article has been updated with ATT rep's confirmation that the problems are now resolved (and the article was softened up a bit as it was originally kinda harsh), but as of Sept 21, I can tell you that speeds and connectivity in Houston still suffer. It's really pitiful.

It seems to me that the 4G signal is sent out in waves or pulses, rather than a steady blanket of coverage.

Anyway, check this out, especially the comments that follow... AT&T
 
Upvote 0
So how is the service in Houston now? I'm interested in switching to AT&T and curious about their service here.

Rather improved for where I live (North of the Woodlands/ Conroe area) There's LTE service in Huntsville now which is a sign of better coverage in general. I've also noted a consistently good signal across the greater Houston area that wasn't there before. I haven't done any speed tests myself, but data and voice are great for me.

I agree. LTE is strong , consistent and reliable. When away from my home Wi-Fi, I literally forget that I am disconnected from the speed and quick-load I get on Wi-Fi while I am on LTE. Its that good!

You should switch if you see a deal you like on AT&T!
 
Upvote 0

BEST TECH IN 2023

We've been tracking upcoming products and ranking the best tech since 2007. Thanks for trusting our opinion: we get rewarded through affiliate links that earn us a commission and we invite you to learn more about us.

Smartphones