What's with the data connectivity dropouts?
#1
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What's with the data connectivity dropouts?
I found this to be a huge problem in both Shanghai and Beijing (although worse in Beijing than Shanghai) on China Unicom. When driving along the 4th ring road, for example, data connectivity would drop every 1-2 km, even when the phone showed a full signal.
One of my friends said it's just because China Unicom sucks; he uses China Mobile. Another said it's because they give higher priority to locals' SIM cards than to SIM cards issued to foreigners, because locals are more likely to complain than foreigners. Yet another of my friends said it's because there aren't many people out by the 4th ring road (yeah right, it's still more populated than the Sunset District in San Francisco, and in any case I can drive down Interstate 280 without data connectivity to AT&T's network dropping every mile and that terrain is far more challenging to cover). Or does it have something to do with the fact that locals pay only 20 per GB and they literally cannot afford to put up decent infrastructure with the revenue they're getting?
It's maddening, especially when the data connection dropping means that the VPN has to reconnect all over again when the connection is reestablished. I've never had a VoIP call drop so many times over the course of just 5 miles of road.
One of my friends said it's just because China Unicom sucks; he uses China Mobile. Another said it's because they give higher priority to locals' SIM cards than to SIM cards issued to foreigners, because locals are more likely to complain than foreigners. Yet another of my friends said it's because there aren't many people out by the 4th ring road (yeah right, it's still more populated than the Sunset District in San Francisco, and in any case I can drive down Interstate 280 without data connectivity to AT&T's network dropping every mile and that terrain is far more challenging to cover). Or does it have something to do with the fact that locals pay only 20 per GB and they literally cannot afford to put up decent infrastructure with the revenue they're getting?
It's maddening, especially when the data connection dropping means that the VPN has to reconnect all over again when the connection is reestablished. I've never had a VoIP call drop so many times over the course of just 5 miles of road.
#2
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This has been an issue as long as I can remember in China. In short the connectivitity of both Mobile and Unicom is not that good. Along with creepingly slow internet speeds this is just something that those of us who live in China have learned to live with.
#3
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Regarding Mobile v Unicom and other theories introduced by the OP, IME Mobile is slightly better on the whole (especially in elevators and parking garages), but Unicom blows them away in many cities. The networks are what they are, and in spite of minor annoyances, are pretty impressive on the whole.
#4
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It seems like he was mainly complaining about missed handoffs while driving along 4th Ring in Bj. Maybe I too am conditioned to this stuff, but the idea of trying to make a VoIP in that situation strikes me as crazy...though not as crazy as doing the same on a train that's traveling 300 kph (something I have actually witnessed myself, believe it or not).
But now that I think about it, I've also seen data dropouts when standing perfectly still. For example, while eating lunch or dinner at a restaurant (one of which was 羲和雅苑, yes right in the middle of Beijing's 中关村 district). That's like not being able to provide service to the center of Silicon Valley when I'm sitting still with full signal. I was also getting data dropouts while walking on the trails in 中山公园.
Last edited by STS-134; Jun 21, 2016 at 10:10 am
#6
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#7
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Only when I want them to. https://www.glympse.com/
#8
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I actually did have problems with wechat location sharing when a friend tried to share his location with me. I had set VPN.ac, which I was using that day, to allow wechat to bypass the VPN, figuring that since it is a Chinese app, it shouldn't need to use the VPN. But it was trying to pull data from Google Maps, so it didn't show anything except two dots on a blank background (until I switched the VPN on for wechat too).
#9
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It's not. My goal is to make VoIP calls, share my location with friends (some of whom don't use wechat), and just browse web pages. All of which is difficult to do when the data connection keeps dropping.
I actually did have problems with wechat location sharing when a friend tried to share his location with me. I had set VPN.ac, which I was using that day, to allow wechat to bypass the VPN, figuring that since it is a Chinese app, it shouldn't need to use the VPN. But it was trying to pull data from Google Maps, so it didn't show anything except two dots on a blank background (until I switched the VPN on for wechat too).
I actually did have problems with wechat location sharing when a friend tried to share his location with me. I had set VPN.ac, which I was using that day, to allow wechat to bypass the VPN, figuring that since it is a Chinese app, it shouldn't need to use the VPN. But it was trying to pull data from Google Maps, so it didn't show anything except two dots on a blank background (until I switched the VPN on for wechat too).
Taking a step back, I must opine that the general tone of your posts suggests that you have a chip on your shoulder with respect to telephony in China. I happen to agree with you that the system could be (much) better. That having been said, expecting it to be something it's not is kind of silly IMO.
On your next visit to China, I advise you to get a SIM that permits you to make old school phone calls.
#10
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. So I guess the people who wrote the app never realized that it's possible to want to use a specific language and a specific mapping service independently.Taking a step back, I must opine that the general tone of your posts suggests that you have a chip on your shoulder with respect to telephony in China. I happen to agree with you that the system could be (much) better. That having been said, expecting it to be something it's not is kind of silly IMO.
On your next visit to China, I advise you to get a SIM that permits you to make old school phone calls.
On your next visit to China, I advise you to get a SIM that permits you to make old school phone calls.
Now if I were a conspiracy theorist, I'd probably assume that the service is poor and:
- They did it because voice is their cash cow, and they want VoIP calls to drop so often that people actually subscribe to the voice service.
- They did it because they want to make peoples' VPNs constantly have to disconnenct and reconnect so that the VPN ends up using up a high % of all data used establishing and reestablishing the connection, which increases their revenue.
I don't really think there's any conspiracy theory here. I just think their maintenance department doesn't know what they're doing, nor does their billing department. They oversold the network and the WCDMA cells are suffering from the "cell breathing" effect especially during the peak hours. Normally this would push traffic from a more heavily loaded cell to a more lightly loaded one; if all cells are heavily loaded, the coverage area can actually shrink and traffic literally gets dropped.
So yeah, I'm a bit peeved. But I'm pretty sure I'll have calmed down before my next visit
#11
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Regarding buying SIMs on the street, the new laws have certainly limited the playing field, but the very closest 小卖铺 to me still sells pre-registered Mobile and Unicom SIMs (much higher prices than a year ago, though, and the SIMs usually aren't Shanghai numbers).
#12
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I'm nearly certain that we told you that SIM was overpriced before you bought it. The China Mobile cross border SIM is currently a better product, and data only costs ~HK$30/G if you get on a plan (need HKID or cash deposit). But, if you fall off of LTE, and don't have a phone that supports other protocols, you're relegated to Edge.


Hopefully this situation with China Mobile gets better in the near future. Google's already given notice that my Nexus 5 won't be getting the Android N update, and security updates will stop sometime around September-October this year (3 years after initial availability or 18 months after it was last sold at the Play Store)...meaning, I'll likely be buying the upcoming Nexus device rumored to be manufactured by HTC. I hope that they were able to put TD-SCDMA into North American model (or they just release one model instead of two).
Yeah, but you guys also warned me that those types of places only sell cards to tourists who don't look Chinese, due to recent sting operations that always involve people who look Chinese. And my problem is that I look way too Chinese. I mean, when people try to talk to me, I find myself having to constantly say things like "我不懂中文". Another amusing story is that at Shanghai Disneyland, at the fastpass kiosk, there is a touch screen where you select either "中文" or "English", then you select the ride you want a fastpass for. There was a Cast Member standing next to the machine to assist guests who might be unfamiliar with the machine. Well I walked up and pressed "English" because I have no idea how to write the name of the ride I wanted to go on in Chinese; the Cast Member then pressed the "中文" button, I'm assuming to try to be helpful. Sigh. I'd be willing to bet 200 to 1 payout odds that this doesn't happen if I look Caucasian, black, Indian, etc.
#13


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Originally Posted by moondog
The China Mobile cross border SIM is currently a better product, and data only costs ~HK$30/G if you get on a plan (need HKID or cash deposit)
#14
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I was jogging along the 4th ring road from the airport expressway exit to Chaoyang park and was trying to hold a phone convo at the same time. The call dropped 3 times in 10 minutes. The person I was talking to was in the middle of Jing'an. I told them that it was to be expected as I was in the middle of the capital and they were in the middle of China's largest city, we wouldn't expect to have good connectivity
. We both use Unicom.
. We both use Unicom.
#15
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I was jogging along the 4th ring road from the airport expressway exit to Chaoyang park and was trying to hold a phone convo at the same time. The call dropped 3 times in 10 minutes. The person I was talking to was in the middle of Jing'an. I told them that it was to be expected as I was in the middle of the capital and they were in the middle of China's largest city, we wouldn't expect to have good connectivity
. We both use Unicom.
. We both use Unicom.I wonder what % of Unicom's customers are postpaid customers, and how many of them are in contracts? Because I smell a class action lawsuit coming if a lot of those customers aren't free to leave. Remember when Cingular Wireless oversold service in California and was hit with a $18.5 million penalty? http://www.howardforums.com/showthre...r-Call-Quality
But my understanding of the Chinese mobile phone market is that most customers are prepaid, no contract.
They seriously need to raise data prices for everyone to the same levels that I paid through mychinaunicom.com, until they can complete network upgrades that allow people to use more data without experiencing crappy quality of service. People are probably running torrents off of their phones (so would I if I were paying only 20/GB).




