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Communications Network Businesses The Almighty Buck United States Wireless Networking

T-Mobile, Ericsson Sign $3.5 Billion 5G Agreement (zdnet.com) 16

T-Mobile and Ericsson have signed a multi-year $3.5 billion agreement to build out T-Mobile's 5G infrastructure. The telecommunications company "will deploy Ericsson's Radio System portfolio, including 5G New Radio and NR hardware and software compliant with 3GPP standards," reports ZDNet. From the report: According to the companies, the contract also encompasses Ericsson's digital services solutions, including dynamic orchestration, business support systems or BSS, and Ericsson Cloud Core. Meanwhile, T-Mobile's already installed base of Ericsson Radio System radios will be able to run 5G NR technology via remote software installation. T-Mobile and Ericsson rival Nokia also announced a $3.5 billion 5G deal back in July. Add it up and T-Mobile is investing $7 billion in 5G between the two companies. As part the Nokia agreement, T-Mobile said it would use Nokia's 5G network technology including software, services and hardware. The carrier also said Nokia would help make its "600 MHz and 28 GHz millimeter wave 5G capabilities compliant with 3GPP 5G New Radio (NR) standards" -- echoing its current plans with Ericsson. In other 5G-related news, Verizon will begin offering installation of its 5G home broadband in select markets on October 1st. "Customers [in Houston, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, and Sacramento] will be able to begin ordering service once the installation is complete, with pricing set at $50 for Verizon Wireless customers and $70 for non-VZW customers," reports PhoneDog. Network speeds are expected to be around 300Mbps, with peak speeds nearing 1Gbps. There will also be no data caps.
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T-Mobile, Ericsson Sign $3.5 Billion 5G Agreement

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  • I'll be curious if people are able to see those speeds in the real world. The 5G signals are susceptible to weather and obstruction blocking and I'd be worried that you might have a lot of variability in the signal. I'd still prefer a hard-wired fiber line that can do 1Gb than worrying my internet will drop out everytime it rains.
    • I'd still prefer a hard-wired fiber line that can do 1Gb than worrying my internet will drop out everytime it rains.

      I'd prefer a hard-wired copper line that can do 10 Mbps over a cellular connection that's capped to 18GB/mo before you start paying per-GB.

  • 5G (Score:5, Interesting)

    by nasch ( 598556 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2018 @09:26AM (#57296782)

    So still not as good as 4G, which is specified as capable of 1Gpbs. Maybe 6G will finally equal what 4G was supposed to be.

  • Just popped in with a friendly reminder that the effective range of 5G is 1,500 fee according to most sources. My router can get farther than that and it's got a 100 megabit connection tied to it. I heard they'd have to put a tower on just about every corner.
    • I heard they'd have to put a tower on just about every corner.

      That's ultimately the goal (long term). We're not talking about big cell towers though. These are small cells and pico cells that can be mounted on roofs and lamp posts etc.

  • This is just further alignment of services for the S/TMUS merger, nothing more. Ericsson was tapped by Sprint years ago to build out and maintain their networks.

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