Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I just switched to Sprint from Verizon about three months ago for the Pre. Then I went for the Hero about a week ago. Now, I miss my hardware keyboard and am thinking about switching to the Moment. I am still able to switch back to Verizon if I want and get the Droid when it arrives. Should I just trade up to the Moment when it comes out, see if I like it, and if not switch to the Droid? Or something else entirely? Help!"
There is a more detailed story here(found via \.)
http://www.networkworld.com/news/2007/071607-duke-iphone.html
After reading the article it seems that this is an apple problem not a cisco problem.
Why is this anyone's problem other than perhaps Duke University's problem. To bog down a network you would need multiple simultaneous connetions and they would have to be doing some intensive bandwidth hogging work, not something I could see happening from an iPhone let alone any handheld UI device. For an iPhone to cause a real noticable problem you would need hundreds, if not thousands of them and it's quite a stretch of the imagination to suggest that you would find nearly that many on campus. I would go so far as to say that you probably wouldn't find 75 in the whole population.
@Blake: Read the article and you will see why its Apple's problem.
All this shows is that wireless servicing technology is miles behind wireless device technology. Progress is not made by scaling done wireless devices to "go easy on" wireless network bandwidth - progress is made when new devices push the limits and force network technology to press on. If this results in an upgrade and upheaval to the Duke WLAN and network infrastructure, I don't see how this is anything but good.