![]() T-Mobile’s ongoing feud with Dish has resulted in T-Mobile keeping its 3G network alive a bit longer than AT&T. If you recall, part of the T-Mobile Sprint merger conditions involved trying to make a viable fourth wireless carrier out of Dish Network (that’s generally not going all that well). ?It would be tragic and illogical for the tens of millions of citizens being protected by 3G alarm radios and other devices to be put at risk of death or serious injury, when the commission was able to broker a possible solution but inadequate time exists to implement that solution,? the group said. A delay of at least 60 to 70 days could help some customers who have relied on AT&T?s 3G network, although arrangements remain to be negotiated, the group said. “The Alarm Industry Communications Committee said in a filing posted Friday by the FCC that more time is needed to work out details. ![]() While the number of actual wireless phone users still using this network is minimal, the network is still being heavily used as a connectivity option for some older medical devices and home alarm systems.Īs such, the home security industry is urging regulators to delay the shutdown to give them some more time to migrate home security users on to other networks: Fast forward a little more than a decade and AT&T is preparing to shut that 3G network down, largely so it can repurpose the spectrum it utilizes for fifth-generation (5G) wireless deployments. ![]() It was only 2009 that AT&T heralded its cutting edge 3G network as it unveiled the launch of the iPhone (which subsequently crashed AT&T’s cutting edge 3G network). ![]()
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