by Alastair Brydon
on 27 November 2012
NTT DoCoMo has announced that it will launch the world’s first combined HSDPA/LTE femtocells in December 2012, to enable improved indoor coverage for both 3G and 4G mobile handsets. Shops and offices will be able to offer high quality 3G and 4G coverage and users will be able to drop back to slower HSDPA services…
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by Mark Heath
on 19 January 2012
As we near the UK’s long-awaited auction of 800MHz and 2.6GHz spectrum for next-generation mobile services, there is very good news for UK consumers in terms of expected coverage of LTE services. Ofcom has published its latest proposals for the award of 800MHz and 2.6GHz spectrum, and it is clear that it has moved a…
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by Mark Heath
on 20 October 2011
There have been two interesting developments in the UK mobile industry this month – one definitely good news for the industry and its consumers, and one distinctly bad. Firstly, the good news! We have devoted quite a bit of attention in this blog to the poor state of 3G coverage in the UK. While having…
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by Mark Heath
on 25 August 2011
In his last blog article, Alastair Brydon talked about the BBC’s launch of its mobile mapping experiment’. The BBC encouraged users of Android smartphones to download and run a specially-developed application to measure and report back mobile signal levels. Yesterday, the BBC announced initial results from its so-called ‘crowd-sourcing survey’, which unsurprisingly shows that 3G…
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by Alastair Brydon
on 28 July 2011
Mobile coverage – whether for voice services or mobile broadband services – is one of the most important issues for many mobile customers. In the UK, while the presence of many mobile operators has helped reduce mobile pricing levels, it has failed to deliver extensive mobile coverage. In July 2011, the Communications Consumer Panel reported…
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by Alastair Brydon
on 18 July 2011
Voice revenues of mobile network operators are under intense pressure from a combination of competition and regulation. Strong growth in mobile data revenues is now essential, in order to reverse falling ARPUs. Mobile network operators must look beyond mobile messaging for this growth, since mobile messaging (particularly SMS) revenues may decline, as they face competition…
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by Alastair Brydon
on 14 July 2011
The momentum behind LTE is increasing, in terms of mobile network operators launching LTE services or announcing an intention to launch LTE services. However, one of my biggest fears is that operators will rush to make high-profile press announcements to say that they have launched LTE, while avoiding any commitment to invest substantially in LTE…
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by Mark Heath
on 14 July 2011
If LTE is to be a widespread, commercial success, mobile network operators must ensure that they focus on providing superior coverage to 2G networks within a realistic timescale. They must not make the same mistakes of network underinvestment that many operators have made with their 3G networks, however unpalatable this is to their investors. In…
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by Alastair Brydon
on 26 May 2011
I welcome Ofcom’s new report, published today, which provides excellent measurement data on the state of the mobile broadband market in the UK. This type of extensive measurement programme has been long overdue. At last, the industry and consumers have access to independent data. While the results may not be a surprise to the many mobile…
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by Alastair Brydon
on 27 April 2011
In his wireless blog, Alastair Brydon advocates widespread 4G coverage, as regulators define LTE licence conditions and network operators begin LTE roll-out. It’s nice to see some European regulators trying to ensure that one of the biggest mistakes of 3G licensing – inadequate minimum coverage requirements – is not repeated with 4G LTE. With 3G,…
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