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Worth getting 5g phone

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  • 13-08-2019 1:55pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 3,681 ✭✭✭


    Possible looking for a new phone in the coming months.

    Is it worth getting a 5g phones and what ones are out there?

    Currently using one plus so is the 7 5g?


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Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 3,933 ✭✭✭Tazzimus




  • Moderators, Sports Moderators, Regional Midwest Moderators Posts: 23,923 Mod ✭✭✭✭Clareman


    How long do you normally get out of a phone? What network are you on? How important is non WiFi speed to you?

    Personally I go through spurts of phones and am getting a Note 10 now so I went for the 5G version cause chances are I'll still have the phone then, if not it'll help the resell value.

    Tesco Mobile still isn't on 4G so if you are on their network 5G mightn't be an issue for a while.

    I'm almost always near a WiFi network so rarely will that be an issue for me


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,456 ✭✭✭The high horse brigade


    Not worth considering it yet as the networks have only started to roll it out, maybe on your next phone after this one :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,184 ✭✭✭riclad


    What s the advantage of 5g,
    in theory its very fast .
    I see no point in buying a phone to download gigabytes of data ,
    if i want to do that i,ll use wifi on my phone ,
    or copy music onto my sd card from my pc.
    5 g uses different parts of the spectrum ,
    they will need to build a lot more cell towers ,each cell has to be connected to a fibre network.Cell towers will need to be located close to each other compared with 3g or 4g towers .
    It will cost billions .
    i think maybe in 2-3 years there will be 5 g in citys and towns ,
    in rural area,s the phone will switch back to 3g mode .
    I have no interest in buying a 5g phone .
    It will likely be more expensive than current phones as each phone will
    need 3g and 5g chips and antenna,s .
    5g networks may be used iot and industrial devices
    but thats not of interest to the average phone user.
    From reading articles on some tech websites ,
    it looks as if 5 g for most users will feel slightly faster
    than a 4g phone if you are in an area with very good signal strength
    And with a data cap of 10 - 20gig per month ,
    I can see no point in buying a 5g phone even it was sold
    for the same price as a old 3g phone with the same
    screen and storage spec,s .
    Its like if i had a car that goes at 100 mph ,
    i will not buy a new car that can reach a speed of 200mph .
    Thats more expensive than my old car .
    Of course when the 5g network is built we will see
    are the new phones significantly better and faster at streaming music
    and video than the phones we have now .
    So its too early to give a verdict on the value of 5g .


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,710 ✭✭✭Bluefoam


    riclad wrote: »
    5 g uses different parts of the spectrum ,
    they will need to build a lot more cell towers ,each cell has to be connected to a fibre network.Cell towers will need to be located close to each other compared with 3g or 4g towers .
    It will cost billions .

    5G can use the existing towers and if Nokia equipment is used can piggyback on existing intrastucture. It is far less expensive to implement that pervious G's. Vodafone have already switched on the network in Dublin. It can also be used as a home network in place of broadband and is ideal for laptops etc... it is far more suitable for accessories, smartdevices and stuff etc.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,789 ✭✭✭rizzee


    Vodafone going live in a few cities tomorrow according to their website & RTE. Will be releasing a 5G device tomorrow and another at the end of the month. Any reports on what they are?

    Edited to add : I see they're advertising their Bill Plan details as 5G ready when you go to buy a 4G phone. Will be a bit misleading to some customers who wouldn't know!


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,681 ✭✭✭Irish Gunner


    Thanks for the replies

    On 3 at the moment and will hold off until 5g gets more active happy enought with 4g and dont use phone as hotspot


  • Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 1,467 Mod ✭✭✭✭Lucifer


    I already get around 100mb/s on 4g with Vodafone. This is capable of probably 4 x 4k streams. How much faster do I need on a phone with 1 screen.


  • Registered Users Posts: 31,828 ✭✭✭✭gmisk


    Thanks for the replies

    On 3 at the moment and will hold off until 5g gets more active happy enought with 4g and dont use phone as hotspot
    I am with 3 at the minute the only way I think I would get 4g (never mind 5g) was if I was sitting on one of their masts!


  • Registered Users Posts: 31,828 ✭✭✭✭gmisk


    Thanks for the replies

    On 3 at the moment and will hold off until 5g gets more active happy enought with 4g and dont use phone as hotspot
    I am with 3 at the minute the only way I think I would get 4g (never mind 5g) was if I was sitting on one of their masts!

    Ironically posted twice - because of crappy 3 signal....


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 518 ✭✭✭Lackadaisical


    I wouldn't bother just yet. They'll be launched with much hype like 4G and 3G before it and then they'll be normal a few months later and there'll be tons of options. Right now you'll be gouged for one and also things like chipsets improve and battery use goes down.

    I'd give it a while.

    I'm tending to see 5G as overhyped. It's potentially handy but I think really it was the previous step, to 4G that made the massive difference. Suddenly mobile services were actually broadband and pretty much ubiquitous and cheap. All 5G does is bring them up a few notches. It doesn't really fundamentally change the experience, despite what the networks are all hyping about. I mean LTE+ can already deliver 100Mbit/s+ and plenty of bog-standard networks here are delivering >50mbit/s on existing services.

    The biggest change that I'd be looking for is massively enhanced battery life. I'm grand with LTE/LTE+ for now. There aren't any services I use on my phone that need any higher speeds than I'm getting on 4G. I'd like to see the LTE networks enhanced though and coverage to improve.

    You should start to see big improvements on 4G though as 5G rolls out as they backhaul over the same infrastructure, so you'll have a lot more LTE+ with less congested links to the core network.

    It's cool to have, but it's not exactly revolutionary in the way the rollout of 4G and was.


  • Registered Users Posts: 165 ✭✭yellowbear


    I wouldn't bother just yet. They'll be launched with much hype like 4G and 3G before it and then they'll be normal a few months later and there'll be tons of options. Right now you'll be gouged for one and also things like chipsets improve and battery use goes down.

    I'd give it a while.

    I'm tending to see 5G as overhyped. It's potentially handy but I think really it was the previous step, to 4G that made the massive difference. Suddenly mobile services were actually broadband and pretty much ubiquitous and cheap. All 5G does is bring them up a few notches. It doesn't really fundamentally change the experience, despite what the networks are all hyping about. I mean LTE+ can already deliver 100Mbit/s+ and plenty of bog-standard networks here are delivering >50mbit/s on existing services.

    The biggest change that I'd be looking for is massively enhanced battery life. I'm grand with LTE/LTE+ for now. There aren't any services I use on my phone that need any higher speeds than I'm getting on 4G. I'd like to see the LTE networks enhanced though and coverage to improve.

    You should start to see big improvements on 4G though as 5G rolls out as they backhaul over the same infrastructure, so you'll have a lot more LTE+ with less congested links to the core network.

    It's cool to have, but it's not exactly revolutionary in the way the rollout of 4G and was.
    But say if I buy a phone now and lock in to a contract for two years will I regret being stuck with a 4g phone this time next year? That's the dilemma I'm facing at the min.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,456 ✭✭✭The high horse brigade


    yellowbear wrote: »
    But say if I buy a phone now and lock in to a contract for two years will I regret being stuck with a 4g phone this time next year? That's the dilemma I'm facing at the min.

    Don't be daft, buy a phone, then you can get a 30 day contract for as little as a tenner a month


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators, Regional Midwest Moderators Posts: 23,923 Mod ✭✭✭✭Clareman


    The way I look at it I was delighted with WAP when I had nothing else, then data was brilliant, 3g was a real game changer. 4g was amazing and now if I don't have 4g+ I feel like I'm in the third world, no doubt when 5G comes along it'll be great but as its in cities only I probably won't see a difference. As I said earlier, I'm getting a phone now and the 10% to get the 5G option is a no brainer for me.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,979 ✭✭✭Royale with Cheese


    I only bought a OnePlus 7 pro two months back. I didn't know 5g in Ireland was this close and also assumed Vodafone would charge a fortune for it when it was released. Turns out I now get it for free buy my €800 phone can't access it, derp.


  • Registered Users Posts: 243 ✭✭Chibs


    I have the S10 5G. I bought it for the extra features it has over s10+. I didn't think 5G would launch this soon look forward to trying it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,789 ✭✭✭rizzee


    Mate 20 X 5G Available on Vodafone today.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,440 ✭✭✭KildareP


    I only bought a OnePlus 7 pro two months back. I didn't know 5g in Ireland was this close and also assumed Vodafone would charge a fortune for it when it was released. Turns out I now get it for free buy my €800 phone can't access it, derp.
    I don't think you can get the 5G version of the OP7 from OnePlus though, you have to buy it through a network operator. In the UK it's only available on EE.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 518 ✭✭✭Lackadaisical


    Unless rumors are wrong Apple is about to shoot itself the foot and launch a 4G iPhone 11 in September, thus causing all of its upgrades to wait for the 5G version. Seems they’re slowly losing the plot.


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,445 ✭✭✭✭The Nal




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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,942 ✭✭✭biebiebie


    Imho.
    Personally I'd hold off until 2020.
    Hopefully there'll be more budget friendly 5G chipsets out then, as well as the flagship 865 which is said to have 5G built in (unlike the 855).

    Anyhow the areas you'll actually get 5g are incredibly sparse currently. I personally perceive the recent Vodafone 5G release as being more headline grabbing than actually being life changing at the current point in time (unless you're lucky enough live/work in a 5g area).

    I'll live with 4g for now, but I'm also looking forward to the prospect of buying a 5g handset next year. And hopefully the network rollout gathers some momentum by then too.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,269 ✭✭✭AllForIt


    riclad wrote: »
    What s the advantage of 5g,
    in theory its very fast .
    I see no point in buying a phone to download gigabytes of data ,

    Unless of course you use you phone as a hotspot to power all your home internet devices like I do. And have been doing for years. My 4g is more than adequate for me though and I don't intend to upgrade my fone for at least another 2 years.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,942 ✭✭✭biebiebie


    Personally I'll be more interested to see how 5G broadband works out, with both pricing and quality/speed in mind.

    If 5G broadband becomes a viable alternative (where available, cities first I presume) then it should make the market more competitive, to the advantage of the consumer I'd hope.

    Plus if you then have 5g on your phone from a different network, then you can split your usage accros two networks. And one can act as a backup to the other (when you're home) should you ever need it. Think network redundancy, important if you work from home.

    Okay so maybe not everyone's use case, but there's some food for thought.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,267 ✭✭✭✭lawred2


    I don't think 4G has even reached sufficient ubiquity to be honest.

    So who knows what is in store for 5G. Maybe the operators will cease the 4G rollout and push 5G instead.

    Either way back haul contention is still going to be an issue


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 518 ✭✭✭Lackadaisical


    The other thing to remember is the 5G updates mean more backhaul capacity that will also be used for 4G LTE and LTE Advanced.

    I don’t honestly see the huge selling point of 5G over LTE Advanced (4G+) it’s very very fast is it’s got decent backhaul.


  • Registered Users Posts: 81,115 ✭✭✭✭Atlantic Dawn
    M


    Can someone explain why someone would need 5G on their handset? (Thethering aside). Perhaps I am missing something, 4G is more speed than I will ever need for use just on my handset.


  • Registered Users Posts: 28,664 ✭✭✭✭_Kaiser_


    yellowbear wrote: »
    But say if I buy a phone now and lock in to a contract for two years will I regret being stuck with a 4g phone this time next year? That's the dilemma I'm facing at the min.

    Unlikely.. Currently 5G is currently just a marketing tool really. A means to sell more phones and contracts.

    At the end of the day it's still a phone and 4G/4G+ is more than enough for current usage cases. I know that a lot of people here (on a specialist tech forum) will use streaming services, but how many "average Joe's" will be watching Netflix on a 5-6" screen at all, never mind in 4K?

    Plus unlike even 4G, high speed WiFi is pretty much available everywhere these days. 5G becomes redundant if you have a decent wireless connection.

    Buy your phone if you want to and don't worry about it, but I'd agree with the point above that you would get better value with a 30 day sim only contract


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,440 ✭✭✭KildareP


    Unless rumors are wrong Apple is about to shoot itself the foot and launch a 4G iPhone 11 in September, thus causing all of its upgrades to wait for the 5G version. Seems they’re slowly losing the plot.
    Apple have never been pioneers.

    They've always sat it out on every new technology, be that 3G, 4G, NFC, high speed charging.

    Nonetheless it has worked pretty well for them to date.

    True 5G coverage is going to be so sparse as to be useless as a truly mobile service for another year or so (fine if you were static in a 5G cell which, let's face it, will either be at home or work where you more than likely have WiFi anyway).

    And I said "true 5G" (:)) above because AT&T in the US is approaching the whole 5G thing a little differently to here in Europe, they have rolled out "fake" 5G which is basically just 4G+ with several carriers aggregated together which gives a "fast enough" browsing experience.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators, Regional Midwest Moderators Posts: 23,923 Mod ✭✭✭✭Clareman


    Can someone explain why someone would need 5G on their handset? (Thethering aside). Perhaps I am missing something, 4G is more speed than I will ever need for use just on my handset.

    Because 28k was more than enough internet before 56k came along, then there was ISDN that was loads, then you could have dual ISDN which was loads, then there was 512k before the jump to 1mbit which was amazing and could do everything you ever needed, then there was a 3mbit etc. etc. etc. Personally I had 360 meg broadband at home which I've since upgraded to 1gbit, complete and utter waste of time as my wifi is only 250mbit but I still have it.

    Just because you're ok with what you have now doesn't mean you be in a year or so time


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  • Registered Users Posts: 184 ✭✭Samson1


    Testing a Note 10+ 5G on the Verizon 5G network in Providence, Rhode Island:- https://www.pcworld.com/article/3434608/samsung-galaxy-note-10-5g-verizon-speed-tests.html

    Sounds like it is going to take time to get their 5G network expanded. Are we going to see similar issues here on the initial roll-out of 5G?? :


    .... "So for now, getting 5G on your phone requires an awareness of where you are in relation to the nodes. Turn a corner—or even turn around—and you might drop the signal. " .......

    ..... "The battery definitely took a hit when compared to the regular Note 10+, going from 95 percent to 52 percent after a solid 2.5 hours of testing and downloads. Granted, that’s more than most people will do with it during such a short time period, but even when keeping it in my pocket, it drained noticeably faster than the non-5G Note 10+."....

    ......"Trying to connect to 5G inside a building was nearly impossible"........


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