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T-Mobile vows to match Verizon’s coverage in next 12 months

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Comments (15)
  1. Aliyah Baumbach says:

    I will believe T-Mobile when I see it happen in my own back yard. My son and his wife have T-Mobile because it is cheaper, but my house is about 40 miles northwest of Tallahassee, FL in Southwest GA. They do not have coverage here when they come to visit  and probably won’t for some time as there are not a lot of people in our market compared to Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Panama City or Pensacola. At the moment, they only have coverage on the interstates in the south GA area, I 75, I 95, till you get past Tifton on I 75. The biggest issue wireless carriers run into is transport cost and facilities between the cell sites and the switching center. Most cell sites, with today’s current technology, requires some type of fiber optic connection. There are very few local telco companies that have spare fiber in their current infrastructure to provide those needed connections without having to lay more fiber, which can take a year or more, depending on distance to the closest wire-line central office. I know the issues I ran into back in ’91 as an operations manager for a Cellular One affiliate in my home town market. This was back in the old analog/TDMA digital age and cell sites could be connected to the switching network with just a couple of T-1s. At the current time, there are only two carriers in my home town, Verizon and AT&T. AT&T came late to the game when they inherited the Alltel wireless infrastructure and Verizon got the customers when Alltel got out of wireless in South GA. As of 2013, AT&T had very spotty coverage even in my home town with GSM and 3G. It has improved over the past year or two, but not by much. The biggest hurdle to overcome in my hometown market is the southern part of the market, long the GA-FL line is very hilly, with as much as a 250 foot variation in terrain in a lot of places. All I can say is that they better hope that they can get a chunk of that 600-700 MHz channel block to install sites in challenging terrain areas like ours because anything above 450 MHz has very little penetration power in the heavy foliage prevalent in our area. There are still a lot of areas in our 9 county market that cell phones don’t work, even for Verizon customers.  

  2. jalyn44 says:

    There are still places where T-Mobile doesn’t provide great coverage – I’m hitting the Oregon Coast soon and expect to have trouble.

    Still, at a fraction of the price, with fairer treatment and outstanding service, and coverage at the places I am 99% of the time, I can’t imagine going to Verizon.

  3. hand.kiera says:

    T-Mobile really does a lot for its customers. That’s loyalty from the Carrier’s End and more on that LTE service is amazing

  4. Bria Franecki says:

    I will believe T-Mobile when I see it happen in my own back yard. My son and his wife have T-Mobile because it is cheaper, but my house is about 40 miles northwest of Tallahassee, FL in Southwest GA. They do not have coverage here when they come to visit  and probably won’t for some time as there are not a lot of people in our market compared to Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Panama City or Pensacola. At the moment, they only have coverage on the interstates in the south GA area, I 75, I 95, till you get past Tifton on I 75. The biggest issue wireless carriers run into is transport cost and facilities between the cell sites and the switching center. Most cell sites, with today’s current technology, requires some type of fiber optic connection. There are very few local telco companies that have spare fiber in their current infrastructure to provide those needed connections without having to lay more fiber, which can take a year or more, depending on distance to the closest wire-line central office. I know the issues I ran into back in ’91 as an operations manager for a Cellular One affiliate in my home town market. This was back in the old analog/TDMA digital age and cell sites could be connected to the switching network with just a couple of T-1s. At the current time, there are only two carriers in my home town, Verizon and AT&T. AT&T came late to the game when they inherited the Alltel wireless infrastructure and Verizon got the customers when Alltel got out of wireless in South GA. As of 2013, AT&T had very spotty coverage even in my home town with GSM and 3G. It has improved over the past year or two, but not by much. The biggest hurdle to overcome in my hometown market is the southern part of the market, long the GA-FL line is very hilly, with as much as a 250 foot variation in terrain in a lot of places. All I can say is that they better hope that they can get a chunk of that 600-700 MHz channel block to install sites in challenging terrain areas like ours because anything above 450 MHz has very little penetration power in the heavy foliage prevalent in our area. There are still a lot of areas in our 9 county market that cell phones don’t work, even for Verizon customers.  

  5. Rogelio Powlowski says:

    There are still places where T-Mobile doesn’t provide great coverage – I’m hitting the Oregon Coast soon and expect to have trouble.

    Still, at a fraction of the price, with fairer treatment and outstanding service, and coverage at the places I am 99% of the time, I can’t imagine going to Verizon.

  6. Destiny Barton says:

    @E B Good luck with that.  When I had T-mobile, I just put my phone in my glovebox on the Oregon coast.  It’s basically just an expensive lump of plastic out there.  There’s pretty much ZERO coverage for T-mobile.

  7. torp.abigail says:

    @KingRockabilly @E B Not sure when you went, but I went a few months ago and had LTE. It certainly had some degraded spots, but I had decent coverage most of the time. At one point I was roaming, so I am not sure but they may of partnered with someone up there. 

  8. Prof. Effie Grady Jr. says:

    Been pleasantly surprised around Newport – solid signal, very fast LTE. So far, so good. Used to be from just north of here up through Lincoln City was a dead zone…I’ll see later this weekend.

  9. Elisabeth Runolfsson DVM says:

    T-Mobile really does a lot for its customers. That’s loyalty from the Carrier’s End and more on that LTE service is amazing

  10. jakob.klocko says:

    I will believe T-Mobile when I see it happen in my own back yard. My son and his wife have T-Mobile because it is cheaper, but my house is about 40 miles northwest of Tallahassee, FL in Southwest GA. They do not have coverage here when they come to visit  and probably won’t for some time as there are not a lot of people in our market compared to Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Panama City or Pensacola. At the moment, they only have coverage on the interstates in the south GA area, I 75, I 95, till you get past Tifton on I 75. The biggest issue wireless carriers run into is transport cost and facilities between the cell sites and the switching center. Most cell sites, with today’s current technology, requires some type of fiber optic connection. There are very few local telco companies that have spare fiber in their current infrastructure to provide those needed connections without having to lay more fiber, which can take a year or more, depending on distance to the closest wire-line central office. I know the issues I ran into back in ’91 as an operations manager for a Cellular One affiliate in my home town market. This was back in the old analog/TDMA digital age and cell sites could be connected to the switching network with just a couple of T-1s. At the current time, there are only two carriers in my home town, Verizon and AT&T. AT&T came late to the game when they inherited the Alltel wireless infrastructure and Verizon got the customers when Alltel got out of wireless in South GA. As of 2013, AT&T had very spotty coverage even in my home town with GSM and 3G. It has improved over the past year or two, but not by much. The biggest hurdle to overcome in my hometown market is the southern part of the market, long the GA-FL line is very hilly, with as much as a 250 foot variation in terrain in a lot of places. All I can say is that they better hope that they can get a chunk of that 600-700 MHz channel block to install sites in challenging terrain areas like ours because anything above 450 MHz has very little penetration power in the heavy foliage prevalent in our area. There are still a lot of areas in our 9 county market that cell phones don’t work, even for Verizon customers.  

  11. steuber.haylee says:

    There are still places where T-Mobile doesn’t provide great coverage – I’m hitting the Oregon Coast soon and expect to have trouble.

    Still, at a fraction of the price, with fairer treatment and outstanding service, and coverage at the places I am 99% of the time, I can’t imagine going to Verizon.

  12. savanna41 says:

    @E B Good luck with that.  When I had T-mobile, I just put my phone in my glovebox on the Oregon coast.  It’s basically just an expensive lump of plastic out there.  There’s pretty much ZERO coverage for T-mobile.

  13. vschmeler says:

    @KingRockabilly @E B Not sure when you went, but I went a few months ago and had LTE. It certainly had some degraded spots, but I had decent coverage most of the time. At one point I was roaming, so I am not sure but they may of partnered with someone up there. 

  14. Dr. Rogers Koch II says:

    Been pleasantly surprised around Newport – solid signal, very fast LTE. So far, so good. Used to be from just north of here up through Lincoln City was a dead zone…I’ll see later this weekend.

  15. Nash Nienow says:

    T-Mobile really does a lot for its customers. That’s loyalty from the Carrier’s End and more on that LTE service is amazing

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