From the standpoint of activity that impacts customers, the first half of 2018 was sort of meh. The focus was more on major industry M&A: the question of whether the
There were no blockbuster new product or service plan introductions in the first half of 2018 and no game-changing new phones. Charter launched its Spectrum Mobile MVNO service … and
Verizon issued a fairly scathing response to claims that it “grossly overstated” its nationwide 4G LTE coverage, particularly in rural areas. {$excerpt:n}
T-Mobile and Sprint announced their plans to merge at the very end of April. Since then, the companies have been working to obtain regulatory approval and concurrently have been making
Cable giant Charter reported its second-quarter results and offered a clear peek into the millions of dollars it is spending to enter the mobile industry. Specifically, the company said it
“Competition has never been greater than it has been over the past two years, and as a result prices are at all-time lows, output is at all-time highs, and innovation,
T-Mobile put a dollar figure against its 5G plans, announcing that it will pay $3.5 billion to Nokia over the coming years to deploy 5G equipment. {$excerpt:n}
Small cells have been a topic of discussion in the wireless industry for close to a decade. But in these intervening years the industry learned that small cells aren’t really
Loon, the balloon-flying entity that used to be known as Google’s Project Loon, is urging the FCC to consider innovative alternatives when it comes to rebuilding mobile services in Puerto