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-   -   Did Motorola fake the 5G demo? (https://www.thevettebarn.com/forums/showthread.php?t=118056)

Mike Mercury 12-06-2018 9:08am

Did Motorola fake the 5G demo?
 
Motorola’s 5G Moto Mod speed test was massively misleading
https://www.theverge.com/2018/12/5/1...on-tech-summit

Motorola wants you to know that it demoed a real Verizon 5G connection on a real 5G phone in Maui that over 330 journalists and analysts were able to see in person. It wants you to know that phone is capable of incredible 5Gbps speeds — enough to apparently download an entire season of your favorite TV show in mere minutes.

So when journalists tried out Motorola’s speed test demo, they naturally did the math. By measuring how long it supposedly took Motorola’s 5G Moto Mod to download a 1GB file in a special Motorola demo app, PCMag and PC World each independently reported speeds of 470Mbps.

But those numbers just aren’t accurate. As The Verge reported yesterday — and confirmed with Motorola — the 5G connection in Maui is running at a comparatively anemic 130 to 140Mbps.

Did Motorola fake the demo? Is there actually any 5G in Maui at all? These are the questions we’re all wondering. When I spoke to Motorola, it assured me that the test was real.

According to Doug Michau, Motorola’s head of product operations who is in charge of the Maui demos, we did actually witness a real 5G demo that beamed data over a millimeter wave signal from an Ericsson base station directly to the 4x4 MIMO antennas inside Motorola’s 5G Moto Mod.

Those files weren’t downloaded from the actual internet, but rather an on-site server, which means we’re not seeing real-world performance.

More importantly, the files appear to have been compressed to smaller file sizes when they passed through the network [so the file wasn't 1gb in actual size]

But it is meaningful in the context of 5G speeds because downloading one gigabyte of file isn’t the same as simply having the file on your device. With compression, it’s impossible to get any idea of 5G speeds or extrapolate 470Mbps+ speeds from a 140Mbps connection. And that means that the Qualcomm Snapdragon Summit in Maui — the last, best chance for journalists to see what 5G is really capable of before AT&T launches the tech in mere weeks — can’t actually do that job.


https://memegenerator.net/img/instances/65769267.jpg

Will 12-06-2018 9:56am

130 mbps over cellular is still amazing.

My "high speed" cable connection in a small rural town is 120 mbps. Not as great as the gigabit speeds available now in large towns, but more than fast enough for gaming, HD video streaming, etc.

Once 5G is nationwide, the problem of high-speed internet availability is O-V-E-R. You can live anywhere without worrying about whether there's a cable co. run near the property.

Mike Mercury 12-06-2018 10:09am

summary:

* it wasn't a real world 5G test; instead done in a controlled laboratory type environment.

* the 1gb file wasn't 1gb in size. In raw format it was 1gb, but then was mega compressed before transmission... then sent over the demo system... then decompressed at the receiving end. The actual data rate given was bogus, in that 1gb of data wasn't actually transferred. This gives false MB/sec speed ratings.

Motorola; in the 21st century they have become masters of deception.

I think this story says more about Motorola... and not as much about 5G capability.

Uncle Meat 12-06-2018 11:22am

Performance testing and how to cheat at it.

U.M.

Datawiz 12-06-2018 3:19pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Will (Post 1651838)
130 mbps over cellular is still amazing.

My "high speed" cable connection in a small rural town is 120 mbps. Not as great as the gigabit speeds available now in large towns, but more than fast enough for gaming, HD video streaming, etc.

Once 5G is nationwide, the problem of high-speed internet availability is O-V-E-R. You can live anywhere without worrying about whether there's a cable co. run near the property.

I saw over 90 mbps down and 45 mbps up in NYC last week on 4G. 130 isn't quite that huge.


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