top | item 15849076 Apple begins selling unlocked and SIM-free iPhone X in the U.S 11 points| sahin-boydas | 8 years ago |9to5mac.com | reply 2 comments order hn newest [+] [-] polock|8 years ago|reply In fact, it's meaningless, because T-mobile version is almost same with factory unlock version. [+] [-] jsjohnst|8 years ago|reply T-Mobile version uses the Intel chipset, this uses Qualcomm. Not only does that mean it has CDMA support, it also means it has a faster and better GSM/LTE stack as well, so no, it’s not meaningless.
[+] [-] polock|8 years ago|reply In fact, it's meaningless, because T-mobile version is almost same with factory unlock version. [+] [-] jsjohnst|8 years ago|reply T-Mobile version uses the Intel chipset, this uses Qualcomm. Not only does that mean it has CDMA support, it also means it has a faster and better GSM/LTE stack as well, so no, it’s not meaningless.
[+] [-] jsjohnst|8 years ago|reply T-Mobile version uses the Intel chipset, this uses Qualcomm. Not only does that mean it has CDMA support, it also means it has a faster and better GSM/LTE stack as well, so no, it’s not meaningless.
[+] [-] polock|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jsjohnst|8 years ago|reply