Every year around Christmas here, I complain that the shopping area has horrible service with Sprint. As of the Christmas season 2018, I can complain about it no longer. We didn't get 100 Mbps service but the service was never unusable as it had been in the past few years since I arrived in 2014.
Further, I had jury duty in Stockton, which has generally had the worst of everything and I had a solid 4 bars downtown, especially on the 7th and 12th floors of the court house, but even on the ground it was exemplary.
I haven't had a lot of praise for Sprint, except for EVDO/3G in 2005 when the others were far behind them, and several years later when WiMAX was delivering data well before LTE was available in even a few places.
I'm pleased to say that the company has done better lately and I'm not sure why but I hope they continue to improve. I'm almost okay with the T-Mobile merger, as long as we don't end up on GSM. I hate having a voice conversation with anyone on T-Mobile because of the way it distorts and echoes.
VoLTE (Voice over LTE) should have been implemented already, so that we could rid ourselves of GSM and CDMA. I expected it would be in place in 2015, even if it wasn't widespread, but it doesn't seem to have gone very far at all.
Update 2019.02.24: Sprint is now advertising that LTE Advanced is in use. They also have "Calling Plus" for Android-based phones, which appears to be VoLTE, as they mention that you can use the internet while on a call, etc.
Apparently, 5G service will be launched in a few cities in May. It seems that they've not bothered with Philadelphia or Miami, which is a big change from earlier times.
Don't you love how AT&T/SBC is finally going to LTE Advanced and is calling it 5Ge, as if it's something better than everyone else. It's similar to when they enhanced their 3G service and called it 4G, even though it wasn't much different from T-Mobile. By the original definition LTE Advanced is 4G, and we're not quite there yet, as far as a nationwide implementation goes. I still see 1xRTT on occasion.
Update 2020.02.17: Apparently, 2020 is the year that 5G will penetrate our lives. According to news, Verizon couldn't cover the Super Bowl stadium with 5G service, so I'm not sure how great it's going to be. I'm still waiting for 4G/LTE Plus to be everywhere--and for 2G to go away.
Update 2020.04.24: The Sprint/T-Mobile merger happened and the two companies are cooperating on LTE, but will remain two operations otherwise. I'm glad that they're not getting rid of CDMA. I wonder if MetroPCS is still using CDMA, as they were prior to their acquisition by T-Mobile. They were known as the worst carrier, but I'm not certain that they were the worst.
In any case, it should be interesting to see how everyone's service goes. Hopefully, it's better and Verizon and AT&T sweat some.
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Showing posts with label LTE Advanced. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LTE Advanced. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 5, 2019
Sprint has improved dramatically
Friday, January 6, 2017
Verizon Wireless' LTE Advanced technology
A few months ago, I saw a press release from Verizon Wireless saying that they supported LTE Advanced (true 4G) in two cities near me, giving much, much, much faster speeds. You know how they were ridiculing Sprint for being good around Kansas City, and all that? Then, they started using technology that was even better than what they had to trounce Sprint.
I've been using a Verizon Wireless hotspot for over two years, after the previous hot spot couldn't connect to Sprint for more than 6 hours--something Sprint couldn't explain--but my phone on Sprint was working perfectly. Back around May, I got the latest, greatest hotspot from Verizon that would support LTE Advanced, XLTE, and allow international roaming.
I was in Modesto, CA today, waiting for someone, and I decided to download something to my phone because iTunes app updates are limited to 100MB over the air. Beyer Park has a tower and Sprint's service is the best there, of all Modesto. I hoped that it would work out that way with Verizon--only much bigger. I regularly get 40-50 Mbps with Sprint there. I'm sure I read that Verizon Wireless was suggesting hundreds of Megabits per second.
I was so disappointed. I do better at home without LTE Advanced. I tested it with three apps and my download of 1.2 GB took a very long time, unfortunately.
I'm guessing that it's similar to when Verizon Wireless was first implementing LTE. A friend lived in a small town that they claimed had LTE. She tried to show me something. After a few minutes of churning and getting nowhere, it dropped to 3G and instantly the results were shown.
Does that make it a lie or an exaggeration? In advertising, I believe it's known as fraud, but it looks like an overstatement to claim a city name without covering the whole city.
Update 2019.03.05: Sprint apparently has LTE Advanced in most locations now, as well as having 3 band LTE in some locations. It really is amazing to see 100 Mbps on a phone. 5G may be coming, but we still don't have Voice over LTE available, so that they can ditch GSM and CDMA services.
I've been using a Verizon Wireless hotspot for over two years, after the previous hot spot couldn't connect to Sprint for more than 6 hours--something Sprint couldn't explain--but my phone on Sprint was working perfectly. Back around May, I got the latest, greatest hotspot from Verizon that would support LTE Advanced, XLTE, and allow international roaming.
I was in Modesto, CA today, waiting for someone, and I decided to download something to my phone because iTunes app updates are limited to 100MB over the air. Beyer Park has a tower and Sprint's service is the best there, of all Modesto. I hoped that it would work out that way with Verizon--only much bigger. I regularly get 40-50 Mbps with Sprint there. I'm sure I read that Verizon Wireless was suggesting hundreds of Megabits per second.
I was so disappointed. I do better at home without LTE Advanced. I tested it with three apps and my download of 1.2 GB took a very long time, unfortunately.
I'm guessing that it's similar to when Verizon Wireless was first implementing LTE. A friend lived in a small town that they claimed had LTE. She tried to show me something. After a few minutes of churning and getting nowhere, it dropped to 3G and instantly the results were shown.
Does that make it a lie or an exaggeration? In advertising, I believe it's known as fraud, but it looks like an overstatement to claim a city name without covering the whole city.
Update 2019.03.05: Sprint apparently has LTE Advanced in most locations now, as well as having 3 band LTE in some locations. It really is amazing to see 100 Mbps on a phone. 5G may be coming, but we still don't have Voice over LTE available, so that they can ditch GSM and CDMA services.
Labels:
LTE Advanced,
mobile hotspot,
Sprint,
Verizon,
XLTE
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Sprint "Cut Your Bill in Half" deal only on plan, not your device. Is that a surprise?
It's apparently not quite the deal you'd expect, and of course, it depends on Verizon Wireless and (the new) AT&T's bad plans.
Re/Code
CrackBerry
Consumerist
DSL Reports
I'm not sure that there is a real story or not. I don't expect miracles anyway. The big two have been working a little bit more to be balance plans with service. However, if you get great coverage where you are--watch out for fake coverage maps from any of the big 4--Sprint should be a good deal. Now that Nextel is all but dead and the 800 MHz frequency band is available, there is a huge chance that Sprint could be dominant in certain markets. There are Spark areas like Milpitas, CA where Sprint is using 800 MHz, 1900 MHz, and 2500 MHz combined.
Verizon has dual frequency bands with their XLTE but who knows what device you need to make it work right now. I've searched multiple times to see if my current mobile hotspot will take advantage of it but they're not telling apparently. I'd prefer enhanced throughput.
Update 2014.12.30: I've been a Sprint customer since September 2000. I've seen great service and weird, poor service. Lately, it's very good everywhere but home. While I'm feeling just more than neutral about Sprint, Verizon (my mobile hotspot) doesn't really make me feel better, and the stories about AT&T and T-Mobile keep me away. YMMV--Your mileage may vary. Do your research.
Update 2015.11.19: The deal is back, mostly. There are more conditions, but I suppose it's a good deal, if you happen to have great coverage where you live.
Speaking of which, Sprint also made a big announcement about 77 locations for their LTE Plus service, which seems to be what they were calling Spark last year. (They were also mentioning LTE Advanced but I'm not sure if they meant that LTE was more advanced than their 3G service or they've actually put the newer technology into place.) If everything is working well, you can get tremendous speed. In fact, they had the service in town for a while. I was seeing 38 Mbps, up from 1-2 Mbps and then, a month later, it was gone and the old service had been restored. (I believe that they took the equipment back to their city of Overland Park, Kansas to help themselves.)
It was quite a bit better than the 7 Mbps that I normally see on my Verizon mobile hotspot, and Verizon still hasn't announced where they have their enhanced two frequency service--only that it exists.
Re/Code
CrackBerry
Consumerist
DSL Reports
I'm not sure that there is a real story or not. I don't expect miracles anyway. The big two have been working a little bit more to be balance plans with service. However, if you get great coverage where you are--watch out for fake coverage maps from any of the big 4--Sprint should be a good deal. Now that Nextel is all but dead and the 800 MHz frequency band is available, there is a huge chance that Sprint could be dominant in certain markets. There are Spark areas like Milpitas, CA where Sprint is using 800 MHz, 1900 MHz, and 2500 MHz combined.
Verizon has dual frequency bands with their XLTE but who knows what device you need to make it work right now. I've searched multiple times to see if my current mobile hotspot will take advantage of it but they're not telling apparently. I'd prefer enhanced throughput.
Update 2014.12.30: I've been a Sprint customer since September 2000. I've seen great service and weird, poor service. Lately, it's very good everywhere but home. While I'm feeling just more than neutral about Sprint, Verizon (my mobile hotspot) doesn't really make me feel better, and the stories about AT&T and T-Mobile keep me away. YMMV--Your mileage may vary. Do your research.
Update 2015.11.19: The deal is back, mostly. There are more conditions, but I suppose it's a good deal, if you happen to have great coverage where you live.
Speaking of which, Sprint also made a big announcement about 77 locations for their LTE Plus service, which seems to be what they were calling Spark last year. (They were also mentioning LTE Advanced but I'm not sure if they meant that LTE was more advanced than their 3G service or they've actually put the newer technology into place.) If everything is working well, you can get tremendous speed. In fact, they had the service in town for a while. I was seeing 38 Mbps, up from 1-2 Mbps and then, a month later, it was gone and the old service had been restored. (I believe that they took the equipment back to their city of Overland Park, Kansas to help themselves.)
It was quite a bit better than the 7 Mbps that I normally see on my Verizon mobile hotspot, and Verizon still hasn't announced where they have their enhanced two frequency service--only that it exists.
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