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Sprint Bolsters Network for New Year's Texting Frenzy
By: Nathan Eddy
2008-12-30
Article Rating:    / 3
There are 1 user comments on this Mobile & Wireless story.
Sprint wants to ensure your celebratory New Year's text messages reach their destination, so it is bolstering its wireless networks in key areas like New York's Times Square.When considering New Years Eve celebrations, you probably think of parties,
Times Square, Dick Clark and one whopper of a hangover
the following morning. These days, chances are you'll participate in one more
New Year's tradition: texting your friends, family and old flames with
greetings for the upcoming year. Sprint wants you to know your message is going
to get through.
The communications company announced that its network team has taken steps to
bolster wireless networks in areas where large crowds of people are expected
to gather. Sprint said it has invested more than $15 billion in capital since
2006 to enhance its networks.
New Year's is one of the highest text messaging days of the year," Bob
Azzi, Sprints senior vice president of network services, said in a statement.
Azzi said the company anticipates traffic volumes for this New Year's Eve to be
about 200 percent, double the normal rate.
Holidays and other large-scale events do put additional load on wireless
networks, Azzi said, so preparation is critical to ensure high-performing
networks when demand is at its highest. Every year, we enhance our networks in
areas like New York's Times
Square, Las Vegas and
in other cities across the nation where our customers may be celebrating,"
he said.
While text messaging in the under-30 crowd is rampant, studies show adults are
growing accustomed to sending SMS messages. The number of adults who are
texting has jumped from just two years ago, when a 2006 Pew Research study
cited that 13 percent of adults ages 50-64 used the text messaging function on
their mobile phone. An October study conducted by Sprint revealed that 20
percent of adults ages 55-64 now send text messages.
The report also discovered that 76 percent of adults ages 55-64 who are texting
are sending messages to their children. Survey respondents said texting is a
fast and efficient way for parents to stay in touch, so perhaps expecting a New
Year's greeting from your mother wont seem so surprising.
Sprints announcement comes on the heels of an article published in The New
York Times that sent shock waves across online technology news outlets. In
the article, Srinivasan Keshav, a professor of computer science at the
University of Waterloo, Ontario, claimed it costs the four major wireless
telecoms (Sprint, T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon) almost nothing to carry SMS
text messages, even though the price of individual text messages has doubled in
the past three years.
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