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Tormod

The "Access point" is for use when tethered to a computer, dialling *#99# will access this APN. Usually something like "internet.operator.com".

Jarkko

I suspect Tormod to be correct. And even if you are tethered, there may be other reasons you are not seeing any difference whether or not you specify and APN here: a) the fact that you have the APN set in PC Suite, b) The operator has specified your APN in your HLR profile explicitly or c) you have a wildcard APN in the HLR profile and the SGSN uses a default APN when the APN is set to empty in your phone when tethered.

Martin

Hi Tormod and Jarkko,

Interesting! That would explain why it doesn't change anything for on device applications.

Thanks!
Martin

Robert Stonhouse

Does having the PDP context active use more power?

I guess there are also likely to be active TCP connections which will send keep-alives and ACKs even if there is no application data-flow.

Could there also be IP broadcast/multicast traffic that the handset receives (and hence consumes more power)?

Thanks

Jarkko

"Does having the PDP context active use more power?"

Not if there's no traffic. In this case the phone goes into PMM-IDLE state and doesn't do any signalling or updating unless a) it moves from one routing area to another, b) sends data or c) receives data. So if there are keepalives, DNS queries and the like, it will consume more power while a context is open. Otherwise no.

Broadcast traffic is a no as the mobile is effectively on a point-to-point host link. The same would be the case for multicast.

TCP keepalives (at TCP level) won't do much as the timers are quite long (120 minutes by default if I remember correctly).

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