



According to the Goeteborgs-Posten , Sweden's second-largest daily newspaper, tests done at Bluetest AB, a testing chamber manufacturer, showed that the iPhone 3G's transmission and receiving results were "completely normal." Bluetest compared the iPhone 3G's numbers with those obtained from tests on a Sony Ericsson P1 and a Nokia N73.
The bottom line: the Sony Ericsson proved slightly better at receiving signals, and the N73 edged ahead of the iPhone at transmitting signals. But Bluetest considered even the largest difference, 2 dBm (decibels per milliwatt) between the iPhone and the Nokia in transmission power, as minor.
"It is not much," the newspaper quoted Mats Andersson, Bluetest's CEO, as saying. "At a difference of 4 to 6 dBm, one might start to wonder if there is anything wrong."
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