3G starts with an intriguing technological premise but ultimately fails to deliver a coherent or terrifying experience. While it looks great on screen, the "mobile video" scares aren't enough to save a weak screenplay. 3G review - Komal Nahta's Blog
3G, at its commercial rollout, offered theoretical speeds of 384 Kbps to 2 Mbps. In reality, especially in developing nations, users were lucky to get 150 Kbps. Streaming 720p or 1080p video was a fantasy. The only way to watch video on a phone without endlessly buffering was to compress it to the extreme.
The "Sakcy film 3G mobile video" was a perfect storm of technical limitation and human desire. It was never good. The acting was wooden, the plots were nonsensical, the resolution was abysmal, and the file transfer was tedious.
3G starts with an intriguing technological premise but ultimately fails to deliver a coherent or terrifying experience. While it looks great on screen, the "mobile video" scares aren't enough to save a weak screenplay. 3G review - Komal Nahta's Blog
3G, at its commercial rollout, offered theoretical speeds of 384 Kbps to 2 Mbps. In reality, especially in developing nations, users were lucky to get 150 Kbps. Streaming 720p or 1080p video was a fantasy. The only way to watch video on a phone without endlessly buffering was to compress it to the extreme.
The "Sakcy film 3G mobile video" was a perfect storm of technical limitation and human desire. It was never good. The acting was wooden, the plots were nonsensical, the resolution was abysmal, and the file transfer was tedious.