Verizon Wireless on Track for Big LTE Rollout in 2010
Verizon Wireless officials are saying their
plans to roll out 4G Long-Term Evolution networks are coming along swimmingly.
LTE
trials in Boston and Seattle reportedly saw peak download speeds of 40M to
50M bps and peak upload speeds of 20M to 25M bps-"significantly
faster" than current 3G speeds on Verizon's own or competitors' networks,
the carrier said in a March 8 statement.
Data rates were an average 5M to 12M bps on the downlink and 2M to 5M bps on
the uplink. Further, Verizon said it successfully tested calls involving
streaming video, file uploads and downloads, Web browsing and VOIP (voice over
IP).
"Our LTE rollout plan positions Verizon Wireless to be a global leader in
4G LTE deployment. We are on track to deliver an outstanding wireless data
experience to customers in 25 to 30 markets covering roughly 100 million people
by year's end," Tony Melone, Verizon senior vice president and CTO,
said in a statement. "As device makers, manufacturers and others around
the world begin to introduce newer and faster products to take advantage of
these incredible new speeds, Verizon Wireless will be positioned to offer our
customers new and exciting products on the nation's first 4G LTE network."
The competing 4G technology, WiMax, is currently in 27 U.S. markets, thanks to Clearwire, of which Sprint owns
the majority share. Sprint
plans to release a 4G smartphone in the first half of 2010, while Clearwire
has announced plans to extend WiMax service in 80 markets by the end of the
year, covering approximately 120 million people.
The
world's first LTE network went live
in December 2009, in Stockholm, thanks to carrier TeliaSonera and technology from
Ericsson. ABI Research said in a report that it expects mobile
capital expenditures to grow by more than 4 percent in 2010, driven by
"the rollout of 4G LTE networks by operators such as Verizon Wireless and
TeliaSonera," as well as investments in 3.5G technologies such as HSPA and
HSPA+.
In 2009, mobile capital expenditures fell by 2.7 percent.
"The rapid adoption of smartphones will drive service revenue growth in
2010, as more consumers adopt data plans to take advantage of their handsets'
features," ABI analyst Bhavya Khanna said in the report.
Verizon Wireless stated that in addition to testing its LTE network it is installing
LTE equipment at existing U.S. cell sites and switching centers as part of its
ongoing investment in its network.
