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trparky
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reply to DaveDude

Re: Which standard in South Korea?

Not to be insulting or anything, but there's a lot of conflicting answers being passed around here in this thread.

All I really want to know is if an unlocked GSM Galaxy Nexus (Maguro) that's bought off of a site such as Swappa.com.
--
Tom
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DaveDude
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1 edit

reply to trparky
From GSM world.

Korea, South 3G 2100 SK Telecom / Bell Laboratories

If the phone has Euro 2100 config.

according to this: »www.phonescoop.com/phones/phone.php?p=3517

It contains the 2100 band.

»www.amazon.com/Samsung-GT-i9250-···05XYU45E

Network: GSM 850/900/1800/1900, HSDPA 850/900/1700/1900/2100. Platform: Ice Cream Sandwich (Android 4.0). CPU: 1.2 GHZ dual core processor. Memory: 16GB built-in, 1GB RAM

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Da Geek Kid

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reply to trparky
if you compare my GS3 link from Wiki will tell you that South Koreans are all GSM frequencies that will support »en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galaxy_Nexus using the same frequencies.


ConstantineM

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reply to DaveDude

Do you mean 3GPP when you say GSM?

GSM does not include UMTS and LTE. Stop spreading misinformation. Nowhere on wikipedia (as if that's even a source of information), is it claimed that GSM includes UMTS and LTE.

To quote from your own link as above:

said by »www.3gpp.org/specifications :
The term "3GPP specification" covers all GSM (including GPRS and EDGE), W-CDMA and LTE (including LTE-Advanced) specifications. The following terms are also used to describe networks using the 3G specifications: UTRAN, UMTS (in Europe) and FOMA (in Japan).
So, 3GPP includes GSM, UMTS/W-CDMA and LTE, but GSM is strictly a term that refers to GSM/GPRS/EDGE networks.

Verizon has never been compatible with GSM; Vodafone owning a major stake in Verizon Wireless, and Verizon's abroad roaming agreements with European carriers, doesn't make Verizon compatible with GSM at all. A GSM phone will obviously not work on Verizon's nationwide home network.

ConstantineM

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reply to Da Geek Kid

There is no GSM in South Korea or Japan!

South Korea (and Japan) has no GSM frequencies! Where do you get this information that they do?

If one wants a phone for South Korea (or Japan), one has to compare the UMTS/HSPA/HSPA+ frequencies (all 3 of these acronyms are compatible as far as frequencies go). Comparing GSM frequencies would be pointless, because South Korea has no GSM!

ConstantineM

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reply to trparky

Re: Which standard in South Korea?

Yes, an unlocked GSM/HSPA+ Galaxy Nexus should seemingly work in Korea (and noone is actually disputing that it will work). The conflicting answers stem from the fact that some people seem to misunderstand that UMTS/HSPA/etc is different and separate from GSM/GPRS/EDGE.


trparky
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So you, ConstantineM See Profile, are saying that the Maguro Galaxy Nexus will work there. Right?


ConstantineM

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According to the following page from GSM Association, any phone that's designed to work on a European UMTS frequency, 2100 (also known as W-CDMA 2100), would also work in South Korea. The GSM/HSPA+ Galaxy Nexus, GT-I9250, happens to be one such phone (I own one, BTW).

»maps.mobileworldlive.com/network···lic%20of

Wikipedia article about UMTS Frequency Bands also confirms that Europe and (some parts of) Asia share the same band.

»en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UMTS_frequency_bands

And just to make it clear about the whole fuss regarding GSM vs. UMTS: if you disable UMTS on your phone, via, "Use only 2G networks (Saves battery)" in "Mobile network settings", or if you have a GSM-only phone (with no UMTS support), then your phone won't work in South Korea at all, because they have no GSM networks. I hope this clarifies any issues you might have regarding the "conflicting answers being passed around here in this thread".

P.S. Google Nexus 4 release is almost here; might as well wait until Tuesday, 13th Nov, and get it direct from Google for 299$ (8GB) or 349$ (16GB). :-)



trparky
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Well... here's to hoping that the dev team behind AOKP can get the AOSP code of the Nexus 4 merged into the codebase so I can send him along with a good and decent AOKP-based ROM.

The reason why I was thinking about the Galaxy Nexus was because device support for it is very mature in the AOSP scene.
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Da Geek Kid

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The miscommunication here is the SIM/GSM is used interchangeably all over the world and ConM thinks otherwise.



Da Geek Kid

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reply to ConstantineM

said by ConstantineM:

According to the following page from GSM Association, any phone that's designed to work on a European UMTS frequency, 2100 (also known as W-CDMA 2100), would also work in South Korea. The GSM/HSPA+ Galaxy Nexus, GT-I9250, happens to be one such phone (I own one, BTW).

»maps.mobileworldlive.com/network···lic%20of

Wikipedia article about UMTS Frequency Bands also confirms that Europe and (some parts of) Asia share the same band.

»en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UMTS_frequency_bands

And just to make it clear about the whole fuss regarding GSM vs. UMTS: if you disable UMTS on your phone, via, "Use only 2G networks (Saves battery)" in "Mobile network settings", or if you have a GSM-only phone (with no UMTS support), then your phone won't work in South Korea at all, because they have no GSM networks. I hope this clarifies any issues you might have regarding the "conflicting answers being passed around here in this thread".

P.S. Google Nexus 4 release is almost here; might as well wait until Tuesday, 13th Nov, and get it direct from Google for 299$ (8GB) or 349$ (16GB). :-)

GSM???? GSM???? Well don't tell that...

ConstantineM

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reply to Da Geek Kid

terms SIM, GSM and UMTS are not interchangeable!

South Korea and Japan are specifically different because they never had GSM networks; elsewhere in the world, I'm not specifically aware of any GSM networks already being shut down (so, suggesting a GSM phone for Europe won't be wrong at all), although I do recall that several operators that have started out since 3G UMTS has already been available, are likewise offering a UMTS-only service with no GSM (»three.co.uk, »WINDmobile.ca and »mobilicity.ca).

Also, some operators switched to UMTS from some other crappy 3G (»bell.ca and »telus.ca, they have a shared UMTS network, IIRC); Verizon delayed the switch, but went directly with LTE with no UMTS. When I was in Canada in 2008/2010, I had an unlocked GSM phone from AT&T, Sony Ericsson W810i, and it wouldn't work with Bell or Telus, but would only work with Fido and Rogers.

And FYI: SIM cards don't mean GSM, either. There are some SIM cards that won't work in any GSM, UMTS or LTE phone, so, even without UMTS: for sure SIM and GSM aren't interchangeable terms at all, I'm again not sure what made you to believe they were.

Let me put it this way: I need a replacement phone for Verizon; you come by and suggest that I can just get a GSM phone, since Verizon has nationwide LTE, and LTE is a GSM descendant -- please keep such advice to yourself, cause it's wrong.

South Korea has no GSM, period.


trparky
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So it really comes down to forget about getting him a phone now. Let him sort it out at the US Military Base Exchange Store once he gets to South Korea.

I would hate to have him spend $400 on a phone he can't use.

And here I thought that GSM was the world standard and we in the US were the weird ones.
--
Tom
Boycott AT&T uVerse! | Tom's Android Blog | AOKP (The Android Open Kang Project)



Da Geek Kid

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reply to ConstantineM
Vz is Vodafone and does support GSM service as well as LTE however, using the CDMA phone in conjunction with sim chip LTE is also possible... But Vz is no SKTelcom.



Da Geek Kid

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reply to trparky

your friend can buy the Galaxy Nexus unlocked and use it there.
»www.eturbonews.com/30567/seoul-o···t-phones
or
»english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/AK/···_5_7.jsp

ConstantineM

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reply to trparky
GSM is the world standard; US, Korea and Japan are the "weird" ones.

I don't understand why you're confused, though. Everyone told you that an HSPA+ Galaxy Nexus and an HSPA+ Google Nexus 4 will both work in South Korea (unless you disable 3G to save battery).


ConstantineM

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reply to Da Geek Kid

said by Da Geek Kid:

Vz is Vodafone and does support GSM service as well as LTE however, using the CDMA phone in conjunction with sim chip LTE is also possible... But Vz is no SKTelcom.

What a bunch of ambiguous nonsense taken completely out of context. You HAVE to use a cdmaOne/whatever phone on Verizon nationwide network, precisely because VZ is not Vodafone, and VZ is not GSM, and a GSM phone won't work in the US on Verizon network. I'm done here.


DaveDude
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said by ConstantineM:

said by Da Geek Kid:

Vz is Vodafone and does support GSM service as well as LTE however, using the CDMA phone in conjunction with sim chip LTE is also possible... But Vz is no SKTelcom.

What a bunch of ambiguous nonsense taken completely out of context. You HAVE to use a cdmaOne/whatever phone on Verizon nationwide network, precisely because VZ is not Vodafone, and VZ is not GSM, and a GSM phone won't work in the US on Verizon network. I'm done here.

No one is claiming a GSM phone will work on Verizon, However Verizon has a 310 assignment so they can bill international US people traveling abroad using their version of GAIT, or GSM. Also sorry LTE is UMTS ver 9 i believe. So yes verizon is a GSM network.
--
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AVD
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reply to trparky

Re: Which standard in South Korea?

Which standard in South Korea?

Oppa Gangnam Style


Nick
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reply to trparky
While most people have a pissing contest about GSM and UMTS compatibilities and existence I will tell you this...and this is based on my experience while actually going to Seoul, South Korea.

It is very difficult for a non-citizen of South Korea to actually get a cellular phone plan in South Korea, unlike other parts of Asia where you can simply go to the local mobile phone store or convenience store and buy a sim card in that country.

When I was there for business, I had my coworkers simply give me phone they had in one of their names that was used for visitors because they couldn't get their own mobile service. The other option I did have was to get a rental phone from the airport but it is impractical for someone who will be there for a whole year.
--
-Stupidity, like hydrogen, is one of the basic building blocks of the Universe.
-Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

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