AT&T Tilt Cell Phone Review - Connectivity
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Mark Brezinski Published on October 25, 2007 Comment on this |
Cellular Bands (8.0)
The Tilt is a quad-band EGSM phone, meaning it will run on 850, 900, 1800, and 1900 MHz bands. These four bands represent the maximum a GSM phone can handle, and will provide you with good coverage both in the US and abroad.
Data Support Score (8.0)
The Tilt is equipped with an EDGE connection, but also runs tri-band UMTS/HSDPA on the 850, 1900, and 2100 MHz bands. This means you'll get fast connection speeds where UMTS or HSDPA are supported, but otherwise you'll get the slower EDGE connection.
Bluetooth (8.0)
The Tilt supports Bluetooth 2.0, allowing up to six simultaneous pairings. It supports the following profiles: service discovery, network access point, AVRCP, A2DP, two voice gateways, ActiveSync Bluetooth service, and DUN. This means it should work with most Bluetooth devices, including Bluetooth headsets, headphones and computers. It won't, however, work with more esoteric devices such as Bluetooth printers.
Wi-Fi (5.0)
The Tilt has Wi-Fi support, and can run on 802.11b and 802.11g. This allows for faster connections than EDGE, provided Wi-Fi is available.
Infrared (7.0)
The Tilt supports infrared, which is sure to be a selling point for business users who routinely find themselves dealing with legacy hardware.
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