![]() ![]() The thumb rule is that over time if your smartphone is able to handle the stress and workload then the performance will be linear meaning the line will not go down. Here, the graph gives you a complete overview of how your smartphone is performing over time. Keep in mind, the app recommends the phone to be in a cold state so make sure you leave your smartphone for 10 minutes so nothing intensive is performed on the device. I know it's been around for a few years, but the electricity industry has managed peak levels for decades and surely used some other softer phrase.First of all, go ahead and install the CPU Throttling Test app ( Free) on your smartphone. Heck, even the term throttling smacks of a non-customer-focused view. But in a competitive industry, and if you are the scale of Verizon, it probably is shareholder-friendly. The wireless industries is one that has embraced the idea of "bad customers." As a customer of many things, I don't like that concept at all. I guess throttling just a few limits the unhappy customers and Verizon is really telling those higher volume users, "We don't care if you leave and, actually, we'd rather you do." ![]() Now, I think everyone should equally be throttled down because, other than in an emergency, the true issue is less than stellar network planning. I guess the part that struck me as fair with this post was that throttling might be done in a congested cell site. Re: 3G v LTE I'm a throttling opponent, I guess (I didn't really have a throttling position until just now), but aside from the lack of customer focus here, isn't throttling something all carriers do (wireless and land-line, and even utilities) at some point or other to manage volume load? Sarah Reedy, Senior Editor, Light Reading Usage-based data plans and shared buckets are clearly the most attractive option for Verizon, and it's hoping to increase their adoption by making unlimited data increasingly less attractive to its customers. While its 3G throttling policy was aimed at migrating customers to LTE - it said at the time that it welcomed the traffic on its 4G network - applying it to LTE is all about economics: Shifting the remaining 22% of its customers away from unlimited deals will bring in more revenues for the operator, even if the policy only affects a small subset of customers.ĬIRP says that because of Verizon's success in squashing unlimited plans, 51% of its customers pay at least $100 per month, compared with only 47% at Sprint, 46% at AT&T, and 33% at T-Mobile. (See Verizon Manages Its Own Data Destiny.) These customers can, of course, use WiFi more often and better monitor and manage their network usage with Verizon's data tools, but the carrier is hoping they'll choose the option to move to one of its More Everything shared plans and away from unlimited.
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