T-Mobile's LTE Advance: What's Happening
Where T-Mobile's going with its LTE-Advanced ready network, what speeds it might get and what the future holds
T-Mobile USA could officially announce its 4G LTE on March 26. Here's a snapshot of what the initial service could offer. The underlying technology
T-Mobile is the first U.S.-based carrier to deploy the 3GPP Release 10 of the Long Term Evolution specification, otherwise known as LTE-Advanced. The operator's new network can, however, more properly be considered LTE-Advanced ready. It is not offering features such as carrier aggregation -- the ability to bond radio channels to get more bandwidth and capacity -- since smartphones that can support that functionality are unlikely to be ready much before 2014.
Why You Should Care About LTE-Advanced (Eventually)
The speeds
The speeds T-Mobile gets on its new network will very much depend on the amount of bandwidth it has to play with, which will vary with each market. Users peeping at T-Mobile's LTE signals in NYC and Baltimore have spotted two 5MHz LTE channels on the AWS band, which suggests a network that can achieve peaks of around 25Mbit/s to 30Mbit/s and less on average. Those numbers should get higher wherever T-Mobile has two 10MHz channels to use.
How Fast Will T-Mobile's LTE Be?
The first markets
T-Mobile has said that it will have Las Vegas and Kansas City ready at launch. Users have also spotted signals in New York City; the D.C and Baltimore area; Houston; and other parts of Texas. T-Mobile hopes to cover 200 million people with the technology by the end of the year. T-Mobile's current networks cover 283 million people or 92 percent of the population of the mainland United States.
T-Mobile's 4G LTE: More Details Emerge
Devices
T-Mobile has the Samsung Corp. Galaxy Note II. The BlackBerry Z10 smartphone will follow later this month.
T-Mobile Starts 4G LTE Launch With Galaxy Note II
The future
T-Mobile is able to start this first stage of its nascent LTE-Advanced network deployment thanks to the spectrum and roaming rights it got from AT&T Inc. after that merger failed. Now it needs its proposed merger with MetroPCS to close in order to make the network a standout. If and when the MetroPCS spectrum gets layered in, T-Mobile will be able to add capacity and depth to its new network in the Northeast while still having some of the best 3G fall-back speeds available via HSPA 21 and 42.
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— Dan Jones, Site Editor, Light Reading Mobile
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