AT&T to expand 5G U.S.
broadband trials
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[August 30, 2017]
By Anjali Athavaley
NEW YORK (Reuters) - AT&T Inc said on Wednesday that it is
expanding its 5G trials to include three new U.S. cities by the end of
the year as part of its push to develop a next-generation network.
The trials will test a faster broadband service where the last leg of
the connection is delivered via a radio signal to a home or business
using high-band wireless airwaves known as millimeter wave. Participants
in the trials will be able to stream AT&T's DirecTV Now service over a
5G connection as well as experience shorter lag times for uses such as
video conferencing and virtual-reality gaming.
The No. 2 wireless carrier, which is currently conducting similar trials
in Austin, will extend them to Waco, Texas; Kalamazoo, Michigan; and
South Bend, Indiana, the company said. In those markets, AT&T plans to
have more trial participants, which could include small businesses,
universities and churches, and larger coverage areas.
The service, called fixed wireless, is expected to be the first
application of 5G technologies and could eventually be a competitor to
the high-speed Internet services offered by cable companies. It could
also be less costly to the companies than deploying fiber to the home.
The tests are intended to help AT&T determine whether millimeter wave
spectrum can travel through foliage and buildings, as well as how
weather affects the signal.
The company expects deployment of the service as early as late 2018. It
is working with Ericsson, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, Nokia and Intel
Corp on the trials.
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An AT&T logo and communication equipment is shown on a building in
downtown Los Angeles, California October 29, 2014. REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File Photo - RTX2PXVD
Rival wireless carrier Verizon Communications Inc has said it is conducting
pre-commercial trials for fixed wireless in 11 cities and that it expects a 2018
launch.
Jonathan Chaplin, an analyst at New Street Research, said in an interview that
fixed wireless service would likely serve niche markets where there is no
existing infrastructure for broadband.
"If there is physical infrastructure, the business case for fixed wireless
becomes pretty challenging," he said. "You're more likely to get more reliable
service over fiber."
Still, both AT&T and Verizon have been buying millimeter wave spectrum in
preparation for fixed wireless and recently got into a bidding war over an
asset. In May, Verizon snapped up wireless spectrum holder Straight Path
Communications Inc in a $3.1 billion deal, roughly double AT&T's initial offer.
(Reporting by Anjali Athavaley; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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