@badrihippo @tripplehelix@fosstodon.org @jacobscharmberg Pure 2G data is circuit-switched and even my old 2G-only Nokia 3410 could access the Internet. GPRS introduced packed switching on top of 2G, hence 2.5G. Then you got EDGE as 2.75G, UMTS as 3G, HSPA/HSPA+ as 3.5/3.75G. It gets messy at LTE upwards which didn't technically count as 4G as deployed but was marketed as such anyway.
@pavel @badrihippo @tripplehelix@fosstodon.org @jacobscharmberg I'm not and seems like I misread the table at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectral_efficiency#Comparison_table indeed! 😅 Networks tend to disable 3G due to that reason so it passed the sniff test. Thanks for doubting!
@pavel @tripplehelix @jacobscharmberg @dos good to hear your EDGE is still working. The trend I've seen in my area is, when a new technology comes in the older one rapidly deteriorates (maybe because they're freeing up bandwdith on the fibre lines for the new ones? If that's how that works?)
So, Vi introducing "4G" (I think it was LTE?) was a disaster as the tower was too far away for it to reach home and 3G speeds plummeted worse than 2G used to be 😵
@badrihippo @tripplehelix@fosstodon.org @jacobscharmberg Also, your operator probably disabled EDGE long time ago as it used more spectrum than pure GPRS at low efficiency (and spectrum is precious for newer access techs), but left GPRS for compatibility with many 2G M2M modules out there.