Friday, March 22, 2019

LTE-Advanced Boosts Speeds, for all U.S. Mobile Service Providers

LTE-Advanced is supposed to be faster than LTE, and it virtually always is, as LTE-A allows the use of more bandwidth. That is true for AT&T’s LTE-A deployments, marketed as 5G Evolution. The roadmap for 5G runs through LTE-A, suppliers and standards bodies deliberately have chosen.  


Keep in mind that lots of things affect end user experienced speeds, including network loading, especially the number of customers trying to use any part of the network. Simply, networks of equivalent capacity, but fewer customers, will provide faster speeds per user. Networks with lots more contention for available resources will often not be able to match speeds on lightly-loaded networks.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Is Sora an "iPhone Moment?"

Sora is OpenAI’s new cutting-edge and possibly disruptive AI model that can generate realistic videos based on textual descriptions.  Perhap...