China speeds up its LTE schedule, could issue permits ‘within a year’

China speeds up its LTE schedule, could issue permits 'within a year'China’s Minister of Information and IT doesn’t always explain his decisions in much detail, leaving us to ponder a sudden acceleration in his plans to roll out LTE. Miao Wei had previously indicated that 4G permits wouldn’t be issued to operators until at least 2014, but now the word according Xinhua News is that this bureaucratic phase will be completed “within about a year.” Perhaps those TD-LTE base stations are being built faster than he expected, or maybe the idea of being beaten to the punch by a little island nation is just too much.

[Photo credit: China.com.cn]

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China speeds up its LTE schedule, could issue permits ‘within a year’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Sep 2012 05:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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EE reveals first 4G LTE line-up: Galaxy S III, iPhone 5 teaser

EE has revealed its first line-up of devices, including Samsung’s Galaxy S III, as well as hinting at a possible iPhone 5 LTE reveal imminently. The heavy Apple hint was dropped during the new 4G carrier’s launch in London, with chief exec Olaf Swantee teasing that there was a new device “very soon.” However, the new iPhone isn’t the only device EE subscribers will be able to use: there’s a range from Nokia, HTC, Huawei and more.

As you’d expect, there’s a combination of high-profile smartphones, USB data modems, and mobile hotspots to choose from. Samsung’s Galaxy Note II is joined by a small number of other Android phones, including the Huawei Ascend P1 LTE and HTC One XL, along with Nokia’s new Lumia 920 and Lumia 820.

Huawei, meanwhile, will be providing at least one 4G LTE USB modem, the E392, and a mobile hotspot, the E589,for sharing the LTE connection among up to five WiFi-tethered devices. They’ll also support HSPA for areas outside of 4G coverage.

What we don’t know, today, is pricing or specific availability. The carrier has also not announced actual speeds we can expect in the first wave – it only quoted up to 5x faster than 3G – but if the devices and data plans aren’t affordable then adoption may stumble.

Update: One correction: the carrier showed us photos of the Galaxy Note II as part of its initial line-up, but says that it’s actually the Galaxy S III LTE that will be launching.

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EE reveals first 4G LTE line-up: Galaxy S III, iPhone 5 teaser is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


EE 4G roll-out plans revealed

New 4G carrier EE will launch its LTE network from today, with four cities getting pilot service, ahead of sixteen cities by Christmas 2012. The initial service will go live in London, Birmingham, Cardiff, and Bristol today, with EE claiming to have over 20 million people covered across the UK by the end of the year.

The four initial cities will be followed by a further twelve. Edinburgh, Belfast, Leeds, Sheffield, Manchester, Liverpool, Glasgow, Newcastle, Southampton, Hull, Nottingham, and Derby will all go live by the end of 2012.

EE’s plans don’t end there, either. By the end of 2013, the carrier expects to have 70-percent coverage across the country; that number will rise to 98-percent by the end of 2014.

Fiber, meanwhile, will be available to more than 11 million households and offices by the end of the year.

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EE 4G roll-out plans revealed is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


EE 4G: Everything Everywhere launches LTE & Fiber “in coming weeks”

Everything Everywhere has rebranded, launching EE, its new 4G combo-carrier harnessing T-Mobile UK and Orange and throwing in a fiber option for the UK too. Revealed in London today, with commercial availability in the coming weeks, EE will be broadly available in the UK by Christmas, delivering high-speed internet access across a range of devices.

EE will be the first commercial 4G network available in the UK, and the EE fiber network will be the company’s first such fixed internet service. There will be both consumer and business options, and EE promises more offerings to be revealed in the weeks ahead of the launch.

Described as “new propositions for a digital generation,” EE will sit alongside Orange and T-Mobile, with Orange positioned as a mainstream option with 3G coverage; T-Mobile UK, meanwhile, will be targeted at price-conscious customers, again topping out at 3G.

We’ll have more pricing details and information on devices very soon.


EE 4G: Everything Everywhere launches LTE & Fiber “in coming weeks” is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Everything Everywhere announces the UK’s first major LTE service, EE: combines Orange and T-Mobile networks

Everything Everywhere announces the UK's first major LTE service, EE combines Orange and TMobile networks

Finally, after gaining approval from UK regulator Ofcom, Everything Everywhere announced today that it’s calling its incoming 4G service EE. It’s a new company, new network and a new brand, we’re being told here at London’s Science Museum. Officially formed of the combined network might of Orange and T-Mobile, the union has been allowed to use 4G services on its 1800 MHz spectrum starting today, although we’re still waiting to hear precisely what hardware will be compatible with the UK’s first LTE network. EE will also start offering a fiber service.

Orange and T-Mobile will still exist, with the colored carrier concentrating on giving customers “more from their phone” (whatever that consists of), while T-Mobile will appeal to customers chasing value. We’ve been told both 4G and fiber offerings will be launching soon, though this will also depend on hardware availability. We’re also hoping there will be more on the cards than just a WiFi dongle, but more as we get it. The first cities to get the service are London, Cardiff, Birmingham and Bristol, with 16 more launching by the end of the year — including the likes of Manchester and Southampton. EE puts that at covering a third of the population of the UK.

We were given an ever-so brief glimpse at incoming devices for the new 4G service — Brits can expect to pick up devices from Samsung, Nokia, Huawei and more “in the coming weeks” — the same timeframe that with encompass the launch of the network to its customers after testing. (The offering from EE will also include MiFi and USB dongles.) It even dropped a iPhone-tinged “one more thing” that more devices are incoming. Possibly something we’ll hear about tomorrow.

Continue reading Everything Everywhere announces the UK’s first major LTE service, EE: combines Orange and T-Mobile networks

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Everything Everywhere announces the UK’s first major LTE service, EE: combines Orange and T-Mobile networks originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Sep 2012 04:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: Low flame

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

Switched On low flame

For many products — TVs and the iPod, for example — the leap to color displays represented an evolutionary change. But color was just part of the big leap that Amazon made with the Kindle Fire, moving from a reading appliance to a converged device. There was no couching it as “a reader’s tablet”, the positioning Barnes & Noble had sought with the Nook, even though Amazon now claims that it has the “best content ecosystem.” Still, as discussed two weeks ago in Switched On, Amazon still managed to fly well under Apple’s radar with an inexpensive, smaller tablet, one that broke a “magic” price point of $200.

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Switched On: Low flame originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Sep 2012 17:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Droid RAZR M Review: The Best Non-Giant Android Phone [Lightning Review]

Android phones have been getting bigger and bigger, and that’s not everyone’s cup of tea. As Motorola said at unveiling of the Droid RAZR M, “Some people just want a smaller phone.” Does this phone, designed to fill that niche, still deliver on performance? More »

Sprint announces 100-city LTE expansion in ‘coming months,’ adds New York, Chicago and LA to the list

Sprint announces huge LTE expansion in 'coming months,' adds New York, Chicago and LA to the list

Sprint’s efforts to bring LTE to the masses have led to a large amount of frustration from the consumer base, but an announcement made by the carrier this morning shows that it’s hard at work to rectify that. The Now Network is nearly ready to blanket up to 100 markets with the high-speed data tech in the near future, and the full list of cities (shown after the break) can expect to enjoy LTE in the “coming months.” That leaves a whole lot of wiggle room for Sprint, admittedly, but at least the company is not backing away from its Network Vision goals. Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, New York City, Miami, New Orleans, Orlando, Philadelphia and Washington DC are among the major markets listed, but take a look below to see if your municipality has made the cut this time around.

Sprint 4G LTE service is expected to be available in the coming months in Chicago, Boston, New York and Los Angeles. And that’s not all. We expect to bring Sprint’s all-new network to more than 100 new cities during this period.

Continue reading Sprint announces 100-city LTE expansion in ‘coming months,’ adds New York, Chicago and LA to the list

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Sprint announces 100-city LTE expansion in ‘coming months,’ adds New York, Chicago and LA to the list originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Sep 2012 10:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple faces uphill challenge invalidating HTC LTE patents

Apple may have a tougher than expected challenge persuading a US court to invalidate HTC LTE patents, with the trade judge presiding over the trial already agreeing with HTC on key issues of ownership. Justice Thomas Pender said he would likely dismiss Apple arguments that HTC does not correctly own the two patents in question, Businessweek reports, telling the Cupertino firm’s lawyer that “I don’t care if they bought these patents to sue you or not.”

“[The patents] are a property right” Judge Pender concluded. HTC bought the patents as part of an overall portfolio for $75m back in April 2011, and promptly used some of the IP to sue Apple. At the time, HTC said its strategy was “to protect itself and its customers from these aggressive tactics and to preserve its ability to compete in the United States.”

Apple, however, argues that the patents are invalid, a stance it sounds like Pender will take plenty of persuading on. “Clear and convincing means something to me,” the judge said, “I have to be pretty darn certain a U.S. patent is invalid.” ”Clear and convincing” are the two elements a company or individual must satisfy to prove a patent invalid once granted.

Pender has already shown he is clued into the tech scene, asking Apple’s lawyers whether the September 12 event is, indeed, to launch a new LTE-enabled iPhone. “It will be thinner and the screen bigger?” he asked  lawyer Michael McKeon, pointing out “that’s what the blogs are saying.”

However, McKeon declined to comment on the new phone, saying he had not been informed of Apple’s launch plans.

Not all of the case has been swinging HTC’s way, however. Pender rejected some of HTC’s patents, which the company had acquired from Google, over concerns that the agreement between the two companies did not, in fact, give it sufficient ownership control.

Apple has already been feathering its war chest of LTE IP. The company has bought and developed around 434 LTE patents to pre-emptively protect its devices, having been publicly warned by Samsung that the South Korean company would aggressively challenge any 4G Apple devices.

[via CNET]


Apple faces uphill challenge invalidating HTC LTE patents is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


So the iPhone 5 will support 4G LTE… but whose?

That Apple’s new iPhone will have LTE seems beyond argument now, but who exactly will get to sup at the font of 4G pleasure? The new iOS smartphone, set for its official unveil on Wednesday this week, is widely expected to follow the new iPad with the addition of LTE connectivity. However, it’s also expected to prompt new degrees of 4G confusion, as Apple is forced to make iPhone 5 LTE decisions that will see some users embraced by high-speed data while others are left to struggle on with HSPA+. Even high profile LTE launches in the UK and elsewhere may not be able to follow up with a flagship iPhone 4G to play on them.

The LTE headache isn’t a new one for Apple – the company experienced similar frustrations at the launch of the new iPad with Retina Display. The first of the firm’s tablets to offer 4G connectivity, Apple’s choice of LTE modem meant different models were required depending on whether Verizon or AT&T was your preferred carrier in the US, while those countries with LTE available outside of North America were left out altogether. Instead, HSPA+ was the best on offer, something which prompted a surreptitious rebrand of the tablet itself after Australian regulators – among others – complained.

Apple’s problem – though one not limited to the company by any means – is the spray of LTE service spread across different chunks of the spectrum. Modern phonee and cellularly-enabled tablets intended for international use have settled on quadband GSM/EDGE (for voice and slow data) and, increasingly in recent years, pentaband HSPA (for up to HSPA+ data speeds on networks in North America, Europe, and Asia). The gradual roll-out of LTE, however, has been left to slot into whatever spectrum each country (and operator) has to spare.

So, Verizon’s and AT&T’s LTE runs on different frequencies, and they differ from the LTE UK and mainland European networks are using for their own rollouts. That’s different again from LTE in Asia. An LTE iPhone intended to run, therefore, on both main US networks plus LTE in the UK, mainland Europe, and Asia would need to pack support for 700MHz, 800MHz, 900MHz, 1700MHz, 1800MHz, 2100MHz, and 2600MHz, a seven-band radio that only Qualcomm is close to offering (and which, with in the region of 36 LTE bands in use around the world, will still leave some carriers out in the cold).

Nokia, a company that led the way on pentaband 3G radios in its phones, is offering pentaband LTE (800/900/1800/2100/2600) in its new Lumia 920, but even that wouldn’t be able to work across all the key carriers. There’s no denying that the flagship Lumia is a bit of a tubby proposition compared to what Apple has been doing with the iPhone of late; the Nokia is 10.7mm thick, versus the 9.3mm of the iPhone 4S, and while the floating-lens assembly of the Windows Phone’s PureView camera is undoubtedly contributing to the bulk, a bigger radio probably doesn’t help either.

“Hoping for a single phone that handles all LTE is a recipe for disappointment”

The upshot? In a marketplace where LTE deployment varies not only by country but often by individual operators within those countries, holding out hope for a single phone that handles each breed of 4G is likely a recipe for disappointment. That’s before you even get to VoLTE, or voice-over-LTE, which is in even more fledgling a state than 4G data.

Rumors of the new iPhone supporting LTE are not exactly new, and indeed the addition of true 4G to the smartphone has been expected for some time. Apple frustrated some would-be buyers by failing to include it in the iPhone 4S built for Verizon, though at the time the company said that the power and bulk compromises involved meant that it was a concession it was unwilling to make.

Verizon and AT&T – currently supported by the LTE version of the new iPad – are almost certainly likely to get LTE support on the iPhone 5. Beyond that, it’s likely a case of which carriers can offer Apple the right marketing support and which have an LTE network – or imminent 4G plans – worth considering.

Apple’s strategy of the past few years, broadening iPhone availability across a number of carriers in each market, may stumble in the face of this LTE headache. The new iPhone 5 will undoubtedly support HSPA+, but those wanting the very fastest data speeds will get a significantly curtailed choice of networks, if they have that choice at all. In fact, though LTE is finally waking up in Europe, data-hungry users may have to wait until the generation-after-this in order to actually use an iPhone on that high-speed 4G.

SlashGear will be liveblogging Apple’s new iPhone announcement on Wednesday this week. Join us from 10AM PT (1PM ET; 6PM UK) at live.slashgear.com for all the news as it’s made official!


So the iPhone 5 will support 4G LTE… but whose? is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.