AT&T to boost HSPA+ network coverage in Philadelphia

AT&T has announced network improvement plans designed to enable HSPA+ speeds and enhanced backhaul in Philadelphia and surrounding communities including in southern New Jersey and Delaware.

The mobile network will enhance plans that are part of AT&T’s planned US$ 19 billion investment in its mobile and wireline networks and other capital projects this year.

The project includes deploying enhanced backhaul connections to approximately 1000 mobile sites to enable HSPA+ speeds and add capacity to support more mobile traffic, installing more than a dozen mobile sites, adding spectrum carriers to roughly 900 mobile sites and deploying DAS networks at seven venues to enhance network coverage during events including one planned at Lincoln Financial Field.

 

Study says no link between mobile phones and brain cancer

A study by University of Manchester scientists has suggested that radio frequency exposure from cell phone use does not appear to increase the risk of developing brain cancers by any significant amount. The researchers used publicly available data from the UK Office of National Statistics to look at trends in rates of newly diagnosed brain cancers in England between 1998 and 2007.

The study reported no statistically significant change in the incidence of brain cancers in men or women during the nine-year time period under observation.

According to researchers, cell phone used in the United Kingdom and other countries has risen steeply since the early 1990s when the first digital cell phones were introduced.

There is an on-going controversy about whether radio frequency exposure from cell phones increases the risk of brain cancer. Their findings indicate that a causal link between cell phone use and cancer is unlikely because there is no evidence of any significant increase in the disease since their introduction and rapid proliferation.

The researchers say that since there is no plausible biological mechanism for radio waves to damage their genes directly, thereby causing cells to become cancerous, radio frequency exposure, if related to cancer is more likely to promote growth in an existing brain tumor.

As such, the researchers claim that they would expect an increase in the number of diagnosed cases within five to 10 years of the introduction of cell phones and for this increase to continue as cell phone use became more widespread. The 1998 to 2007 study period would therefore relate to the period 1990 to 2002 when cell phone use in the UK increased from zero to 65% of households.

The team, which included researchers from the Institute of Occupational Medicine in Edinburgh and Drexel University, Philadelphia, found a small increase in the incidence of cancers in the temporal lobe of 0.6 cases per 100,000 people or 31 extra cases per year in a population of 52 million. Brain cancers of the parietal lobe, cerebrum and cerebellum in men actually fell slightly between 1998 and 2007.

Research suggests that the increased and widespread use of cell phones, which in some studies was associated to increased brain cancer risk, has not led to a noticeable increase in the incidence of brain cancer in England between 1998 and 2007.

It is very unlikely that they are at the forefront of a brain cancer epidemic related to cell phones, as some have suggested, although they did observe a small increased rate of brain cancers in the temporal lobe corresponding to the time period when cell phone use rose from zero to 65% of households. However, to put this into perspective, if this specific rise in tumor incidence was caused by cell phone use, it would contribute to less than one additional case per 100,000 population in a decade.

Researchers cannot exclude the possibility that there are people who are susceptible to radio-frequency exposure or that some rare brain cancers are associated with it but they interpret their data as not indicating a pressing need to implement public health measures to reduce radio-frequency exposure from cell phones.

Miami, New York and LA top the stolen phone charts in the US

­Miami, New York and Los Angeles have become a hub for cell phone theft in the USA, according to a survey. The survey found that 36% of US consumers have become victim to cell phone loss or theft.

In the survey, Miami is claimed as the city with the highest rate of cell phone loss or theft against the 20 most populated cities in the U.S. In fact, over half (52%) of respondents in Miami have experienced cell phone loss/theft. New York and Los Angeles were at the second and third slot in the survey with 49% and 44% of respondents experiencing loss/theft respectively.

Frustration was the most dominant feeling that consumers experienced when their mobile phone was lost or stolen, likely because 87% could neither remotely lock nor remotely wipe their phone’s memory afterwards and more than half (54 percent) of all smartphone users did not password protect their phones. An overwhelming majority of respondents contacted their mobile service provider to resolve the situation as the first step and ultimately reported that it cost an average of $125.30 to resolve.

Top 20 US Cities For Cell Phone Loss/Theft:

1. Miami – 52%
2. New York- 49%
3. Los Angeles- 44%
4. Phoenix- 41%
5. Sacramento- 41%
6. Chicago- 40%
7. Dallas- 39%
8. Houston- 37%
9. Philadelphia- 36%
10. Tampa- 36%
11. Cleveland- 36%
12. Boston- 35%
13. San Francisco- 35%
14. Atlanta- 34%
15. Orlando- 34%
16. Denver- 34%
17. Washington DC- 31%
18. Seattle- 31%
19. Detroit- 31%
20. Minneapolis – 29%

T-Mobile USA to continue HSPA+ roll out

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Rolling out of HSPA+ network is planned to be continued by T-Mobile USA in a number of densely populated markets in the Northeast of the country, including New York City, parts of New Jersey, upstate New York, Connecticut and Providence.

Memphis and Las Vegas are also included in the list of the initial areas of Philadelphia and Washington, DC.

According to the telecom operator, the 21Mbps version of the HSPA+ standard now covers more than 30 million potential customers with plans to cover 100 metro areas and 185 million pops by the end of the year.

T- Mobile expands HSPA+ network (USA)

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Plans to carry out the up gradation work of 3G networks to HSPA+ standard has been outlined by T- Mobile USA. T-Mobile expects to deploy HSPA across the breadth of its 3G footprint by the end of 2010, covering more than 100 metropolitan areas and 185 million people.

According to Neville Ray, senior vice president of engineering and operations for T-Mobile USA, consumers want a mobile broadband experience that’s easy and as good as their connection at home on the best wireless devices available and this year T-Mobile will upgrade its national 3G network to HSPA+ which will support faster speeds and give customers a superior wireless data experience when they access their mobile social network, stream videos or share content.

A successful launch of HSPA+ network was completed by T-Mobile in Philadelphia last autumn. HSPA+ has been made commercially available by the telco in new markets including major areas of New York City, New Jersey, Long Island and suburban Washington, D.C.  Los Angeles is going to be the latest entry in the list.

Sprint to launch 4G wireless this summer in USA

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: 4G WiMAX mobile phone is planned to be released by Sprint-Nextel this summer to combat its continued struggles. Sprint plans to be the first U.S. wireless provider to market.

Data speed up to 10 times faster than current 3G network speeds is promised by the WiMAX supporters as viewing streaming videos, listening to online radio, communicating via instant message and other higher data apps operates faster using a WiMAX network.

San Francisco, New York, Washington, D.C. and Boston could not avail the WiMAX service currently but it is available in Atlanta, Baltimore, Las Vegas, Chicago, Philadelphia, Portland, Dallas and Seattle. Sprint is actively selling 4G products now, but the products thus far have been USB modems and a portable hotspot router.

T-Mobile complete HSPA 7.2 rollout

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: HSPA 7.2 technology rollout has been completed by T-Mobile USA across its entire network footprint. The technology will provide peak downlink speeds of 7.2Mbps and will cover around 200 million people. Currently, the trial is conducted in Philadelphia.

According to company’s CTO Cole Brodman, T-Mobile would follow the deployment of HSPA 7.2 with an immediate rollout of the HSPA+ standard. This could further boost downlink speeds to up to 21Mbps.

RCN enters mobile market

RCN Corp. has teamed with a Maryland company to test a mobile phone service in its Boston market that the cable, telephone and Internet provider will offer along with its other services.

RCN yesterday said its deal with MobilePro Corp. of Bethesda, Md., creates a new “RCN Wireless” service the companies will introduce to existing RCN customers in Framingham, Natick, Waltham, Newton and 15 other Boston area communities by the end of September.

RCN, headquartered in Herndon, Va., will bundle the wireless service and an RCN-branded mobile phone in a “Quadruple Play” package with its existing TV, Web and land-line phone services

The company will also offer other bundle combinations, and RCN Wireless will be available alone. But customers will get the best price on each service when they buy all four, according to Linda Duggan, senior vice president and general manager for RCN in New England.

For now, RCN will only offer wireless service in the communities where it currently operates, Duggan said. But the company may expand the mobile-phone service to a wider area in Massachusetts.

RCN is still working on price structures for entry-level, in-network, family and premium-level service plans. Duggan said the costs will be “competitive” with the prices other cable and phone companies offer.

“We’re excited to put this out because it follows the direction we’ve always gone in,” Duggan said yesterday, referring to the company’s bundling strategy. “The Boston market is very aware of wireless products and Internet products and the technology is widespread. It makes sense to test it here.”

MobilePro’s CEO, Tom Mazerski, said RCN Wireless will run on Verizon Wireless’ network. MobilePro will perform all supporting activities for RCN, including sales, billing and customer service.

RCN competes with much larger rivals Comcast Corp., which offers cable TV, Internet and phone service throughout MetroWest, and Verizon Communications Inc., which offers phone and Web service and is rolling out a TV service in some parts of the state. Verizon jointly owns Verizon Wireless.

In November, Philadelphia-based Comcast and three other cable providers teamed up with Sprint Nextel Corp. to offer a “quadruple play” package of their own that would include mobile phone service.

“We look forward to rolling out the wireless product to Boston in the late fall and integrating a mobility component in our local services that provides real value to consumers,” Marc Goodman, a Comcast spokesman, said yesterday. “The joint venture has been working on delivering functional software, engineering and operations needs.”

Source- http://www.metrowestdailynews.com

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