Verizon Wireless Completes First Successful LTE 4G Data Calls
Verizon Wireless is a step closer to its promise of offering
nationwide Long Term Evolution (LTE) 4G coverage by 2013. On Aug. 14,
the carrier reports, it completed successful LTE data calls in Boston
and Seattle, both based on the 3GPP Release 8 standard and over 700MHz
spectrum.
If any small talk was involved, it was accompanied by streaming video,
file uploads and downloads and some Internet browsing. Verizon also
made LTE 4G data calls using Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP).
"Verizon Wireless, with outstanding cooperation from our partner
suppliers, is fully committed to harnessing the power of LTE over our
700MHz spectrum. This combination of state-of-the art technology and
prime spectrum will soon make a ubiquitous, highly mobile, super-fast
broadband experience a reality for customers," said Tony Melone,
Verizon's senior vice president and chief technology offer, in a
statement.
"This significant milestone in our LTE 4G network testing, exemplified
by the first data calls in Boston and Seattle, further validates our
early support and decision to select LTE as the standard for our
next-generation wireless broadband network," Melone added.
Contributing to the effort were partners Alcatel-Lucent in Boston and Ericsson in Seattle, which each supplied base stations for radio access. LG and Samsung contributed trial devices, and Starent Networks and Nokia Siemens Networks provided network equipment.
According to Verizon, Motorola, ST-Ericsson and Qualcomm will all be offering trial devices soon as well.
Boston and Seattle - which were chosen for their mixes of urban and
suburban neighborhoods, as well as their tech-savvy populations -
reportedly now each have 10 LTE 4G cell sites up and running.
Verizon hopes launch LTE 4G networks in 30 markets in 2010, which would
cover 100 million people, before rolling out nationwide coverage in
2013. The trails are expected to help Verizon and its partners better
understand how to prepare cell sites and add the new technology to its
network.
LTE main competition in the race to 4G is WiMax, which is widely
deployed around the globe but has so far only been rolled out in a
handful of U.S. markets by Clearwire, with the help of Sprint. In January, the two added Portland, Ore., to the list.
