Showing posts with label T-Mobile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label T-Mobile. Show all posts

Friday, November 5, 2010

T-Mobile, Sprint Sow Confusion Over '4G'

The Wall Street Journal

Get ready for a confusing new war of words in the cellphone business.

 
 
While many American consumers are still scratching their heads over what exactly to make of current 3G mobile technology, carriers are already aggressively rolling out claims of faster, next-generation service on networks they're spending billions of dollars to upgrade.

The new buzzword is 4G—for fourth generation—and the implication is super fast speeds that make it a snap to watch streaming videos or download big data files on the go.

The catch is the carriers disagree about what counts as 4G. And the one organization that sets anything like an official definition has come up with a surprising conclusion: None of them deliver speeds that qualify.

T-Mobile USA is the latest to jump into the fray, boasting in ads that started running Tuesday that it owns "America's largest 4G network"—the same one it advertised in March as the country's fastest 3G network.

That doesn't sit well with Sprint Nextel Corp., which has been evangelizing the benefits of 4G for the past two years and rolling out an advanced network. Sprint's ads brag the carrier is "bringing you the first wireless 4G network."

"They are putting a mask on 3G and pretending it's 4G," Matt Carter, head of Sprint's 4G business, said of T-Mobile's campaign.

Clearwire Chief Commercial Officer Mike Sievert said the company's ability to deliver more capacity and better value will continue to set it apart. He added customers aren't going to get caught up with the alphabet soup of technology buzzwords.

Sprint's network, which is being built by partner Clearwire Corp., runs on a technology called WiMax, the first wireless broadband standard.

T-Mobile has been upgrading its network to a faster technology called HSPA+.

T-Mobile defends its decision to brand its network as 4G, claiming it is faster—downloading data at five to eight megabits a second versus three to six megabits a second for Sprint and Clearwire.

"If you look at the speed of the WiMax network out there, we're meeting, beating and exceeding them right now," said Reid Walker, a spokesman for T-Mobile USA, which is a unit of Deutsche Telekom AG.

The increased rhetoric underscores the high-stakes game played by the carriers as they jockey for position.

With subscriber growth slowing, carriers are counting on upgrading customers to more powerful phones and more expensive data services in order to drive growth.

Carriers are also trying to lure consumers by advertising new 4G-capable smartphones, such as Sprint's HTC Evo 4G. Consumers in turn are starting to show interest in so-called 4G networks, even if they don't quite know what they are.

The conflicting campaigns probably won't help.

A recent survey by Yankee Group of more than 1,200 consumers found 57% had either never heard of 3G or didn't understand the term. With 4G, the ranks of the confused jump to 68%.

"That is going to get pretty ridiculous really quickly," said Christopher Nicoll, analyst at Yankee Group.

Jamie Monberg, a 38-year-old executive for a Seattle-based design firm, is a gadget enthusiast who covets a 4G phone. But he acknowledges it's tough to sort out all the claims. "To be perfectly honest, even as a technologist, it's incredibly confusing," Mr. Monberg said.

In a sense, T-Mobile and Sprint/Clearwire are both wrong. The International Telecommunications Union, a United Nations agency responsible for setting global standards for communications technology, announced Oct. 21 that only two technologies—LTE-Advanced and WiMax 2—truly qualify as 4G. The ITU determined those could clear its hurdle of speeds of 100 megabits per second for mobile downloads.

While Verizon Wireless is launching an LTE network and Sprint and Clearwire have embraced WiMax, they are using earlier-stage technologies that don't come close to the specifications laid out by the ITU.

"We are comfortable with the way our LTE network will perform," a Verizon Wireless spokesman said.

He declined to comment on whether the carrier would embrace the 4G name. 

The increased noise over 4G only diminishes Sprint and Clearwire's early move into faster technology.

Clearwire, which turned on its WiMax network in the New York area Monday, is available in nearly 60 markets. Verizon Wireless plans to have its LTE network up and running in 38 markets by the end of the year.

AT&T Inc., meanwhile, is rolling out the same HSPA+ technology as T-Mobile.

"Third-party research is clear—AT&T has the nation's fastest mobile broadband network, period," said an AT&T spokesman.

The carrier plans to start moving to LTE next year. It hasn't said whether the network will be called 4G.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Amazon Drops T-Mobile G2 Smartphone Price To $99

Information Week

The HTC-manufactured device comes with a two-year agreement and free shipping for new customers.


Online retail giant Amazon is offering the recently released T-Mobile HTC G2 Android-based smartphone for $99.

The hitch is you have to agree to a new, two-year contract to take advantage of the deal. In exchange, users won't have to deal with mail-in rebates like they would if they were buying the phone directly from T-Mobile, and can take advantage of Amazon's free two-day shipping offer. The offer is ideal for new customers, since those who want to upgrade have to pay $199.

Both T-Mobile and Best Buy are charging $199.99 with a two-year contract for the G2, or customers can opt for no contract and pay $499.99. Radio Shack recently cut the price of the device to $149.99 with an instant rebate and two-year agreement.

On Tuesday, the carrier reportedly released an over-the-air update for the device with Wi-Fi calling added, along with Internet tethering and some performance upgrades. The upgrade also may include a new radio and the ability to update Google Goggles, according to reports.

The T-Mobile G2 has reportedly had some recent issues surrounding hacking into and rooting the phone in order to make modifications. Reports have said the phone has an "internal cop" that detects when it is rooted, and once that happens, the modifications are undone and phone is restored to its original condition because the system has been corrupted.

The G2 has a 3.7-inch display and runs on Android 2.2 OS over T-Mobile's 4G HSPA+ data network. It has a full QWERTY keyboard and an 800MHz Snapdragon processor, support for 32GB microSD cards, a 3.5mm headset jack, Wi-Fi, GPS, and Bluetooth. It also features a 5-megapixel camera with LED flash and autofocus. The device's dimensions are 4.7 x 2.4 x 0.06 inches and it weighs 6.5 oz. It provides talk time of up to 6.5 hours.

The G2 price cut isn't one of Amazon's better cell phone deals; over the summer, the retailer offered the Samsung Vibrant for a penny.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Customers Across U.S. Affected By T-Mobile Outage

Atlanta Business News


T-Mobile said Wednesday it's fixed the technical problems that caused about 5 percent of its customers in the U.S. to lose phone, text-messaging and Internet service Tuesday night.

Now, the mobile carrier is moving on to find the root cause of the problem, the company said in a statement.

"We sincerely apologize for the inconvenience that this has caused our customers," the company said in a statement.

T-Mobile, a unit of Deutsche Telekom AG, is the nation's fourth-largest cell carrier but lags significantly behind the big three of AT&T Mobility, Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel.

A representative of the company reached by phone on Tuesday said there were outages, but technicians are working on a solution. She could not provide more technical detail. Not all customers were affected by the outage.

"We’re making good progress restoring messaging and business voip service to affected customers. At this time (9 p.m. Tuesday), approximately 5 percent of T-Mobile customers are experiencing service disruptions. Issues began at approximately 5:30 p.m. Eastern time. Our rapid response team is working continuously to fully resolve this disruption. We sincerely apologize for the inconvenience that this has caused our customers," a T-Mobile spokesperson said in a press release.

T-Mobile also had trouble in early October when Sidekick phone users were unable to connect to the Internet or use their contact list for about two weeks.

Those still experiencing problems should contact T-Mobile. A forum has been set up for those affected by the outage.