Sprint
extends its fastest network to NY, 190 markets
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[April 16, 2016]
By Malathi Nayak
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Sprint Corp <S.N>
said on Friday it has extended LTE Plus, a network improvement that
offers customers its fastest network and higher data speeds to New York
City and 190 other markets.
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Overland Park, Kansas-based Sprint has been giving customers
half-off discounts to switch to its service and cutting costs to the
tune of $2.5 billion by slashing jobs and expenses, in an attempt to
reverse years of customer defections and losses.
Moreover, the company has been making network upgrades to better
compete with bigger rivals and draw customers to its service.
LTE Plus "gives customers more capacity so they get a much better
experience," chief technology officer John Saw said in an interview.
"If they have the latest phones (compatible with Sprint's
technology), they get much higher speeds as well."
Sprint's LTE Plus was already available in cities such as Houston,
Chicago and Las Vegas before the recent expansion. New York was the
largest of the 191 new markets to receive the service. LTE Plus will
be rolled out in more markets in coming months, Saw said.
The company has been under pressure to cut costs because of concerns
that it was spending too much to acquire and retain customers.
Sprint currently has a debt load of about $34 billion.
The company has the fourth-largest U.S. subscriber base, but has a
larger trove of spectrum than its rivals AT&T Inc <T.N>, Verizon
Communications Inc <VZ.N> and T-Mobile US Inc <TMUS.O>. Spectrum or
wireless airwaves are a valuable resource as wireless providers work
to increase their network capacity as consumers use data-heavy apps
and video on mobile devices.
To give customers faster speeds and connectivity in densely
populated areas such as New York, Sprint has been deploying its
high-frequency or 2.5 GHz airwaves and relaying signals from big
wireless towers to small cells placed on lampposts and rooftops that
transmit and deliver them to users' mobile devices.
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The company is also working on adding channels to its 2.5 GHz bands
to accommodate more wireless signals and increase network capacity.
Using airwaves in this way, "prepares us for 5G," Sprint's chief
operating officer Gunther Ottendorfer, said in an interview.
5G, the next-generation of cellular technology is expected to offer
1,000-fold gains in capacity over existing networks and the
potential to connect at least 100 billion devices from connected
cars to machines and devices.
Sprint is not interested in selling its spectrum assets to raise
funds, Saw and Ottendorfer said.
(Reporting by Malathi Nayak; Editng by Andrew Hay)
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