Tom Krazit | Aug 28, 2008

A new series of tests coming out of Sweden appears to absolve the iPhone 3G's
antenna from blame over the phone's reception issues.
A Swedish tech publication known as
GP conducted a series of tests this week on the antennas of iPhone 3Gs belonging to users
reporting reception issues, as a follow-up to an earlier test on an iPhone 3G
that was connecting to 3G networks as designed. In both cases, the iPhone 3G
antenna was functioning normally and emitting a strong signal, leading GP to
conclude that the iPhone's hardware is not the culprit.
The GP report does not address whether a software issue is to blame for the
problems, which appears to be Apple's stance. The company has admitted that
the 2.0.2 software release was
designed in part to address the reception problems that iPhone 3G users have
been reporting since the device went on sale in July. While some have reported
that the 2.0.2 update was just the trick for their problems,
others
are still seeing problems connecting to 3G networks in areas that supposedly
offer coverage.
While Apple has been working on its end to fix the 3G reception problems,
perhaps it isn't the only company that has some work to do. Citigroup analyst
Jim Sura
released a research note this week reporting that the US debut of Research in
Motion's BlackBerry Bold has been held up by similar reception problems. The
common thread? AT&T's 3G network.
Via
CNET Blogs
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