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All four of the major carriers have been in a race to see who can hype the upcoming fifth generation wireless (5G) standard the highest. All four have insisted that their in the lead in terms of embracing the new technology, which should deliver significantly faster wireless speeds, and very low latencies. Granted the 5G standard doesn't even technically exist yet, and serious deployment won't actually take place until next year, but that's not stopping carrier marketing departments from hyping the rise of gigabit wireless connections. Verizon has perhaps been at the front of the gigabit 5G hype pack, stating since last year that it was seeing gigabit speeds in the lab, and would be deploying some variation of 5G wireless technology this year.But Verizon's three major competitors in recent weeks have matched Verizon's level of 5G hype, despite criticizing it just a few months ago. For example, Sprint recently said this of its gigabit plans:quote:T-Mobile, which last year called Verizon's 5G claims "bullshit," has this to say: quote: For many years the knock on T-Mobile was that while its service might be a bit cheaper, its coverage and signal quality and speed left something to be desired when compared to Verizon. While Verizon continues to cling to this narrative to justify higher prices, T-Mobile continues to argue that things have changed -- and the company's network is now on par with Verizon on speed, and only slightly behind big red in terms of overall coverage. How behind exactly? In a year end blog post, T-Mobile CTO Neville Ray indicated the company currently reaches just 1 million fewer subscribers that Verizon nationwide. Verizon Wireless says the company has deployed pre-standard fifth generation wireless gear in ten different cities as the company prepares to deploy significantly faster wireless service sometime this year. The company has consistently hyped the fact that it intends to launch some flavor of 5G technology this year, despite there being no formal 5G standard, and serious deployment not expected until 2020 or later. Users in our Charter forum are none too pleased that the newly merged company is now charging users an arbitrary $200 activation fee just to order the company's fastest 300 Mbps broadband service tier. Verizon has confirmed leaked plans to crack down (again) on the company's grandfathered unlimited data users. As we noted last week, Verizon employees have been anonymously posting over at Reddit about the crackdown, which involves telling customers that eat more than 200 GB in any given month that they may lose their connections if they don't slow down their consumption. A new white house report heavily criticizes the practice of hidden fees, and specifically singles out the telecom industry for its expanded and often creative behavior on this front. The report by the National Economic Council laments the fees in the hotel, airline, concert and telecom industries, correctly noting that such fees allow companies to advertise one price, but charge something entirely different. At the tail end of the company's presentation last week, T-Mobile CEO John Legere made a number of predictions for 2017. Among them was the claim that the cable industry's attempts to enter the wireless industry (in Charter and Comcast's case by striking new MVNOs with Verizon Wireless) will fail utterly, and that by this time next year these companies will be in "full retreat" from their wireless experiments. • City of London launches 'world-class' wireless network; expects the service to surpass recently rolled out in New York [computerworlduk.com] • Comcast Customers in Connecticut Hit with a Monday Outage [cedmagazine.com] • Sling Media reportedly halts production of once-revolutionary Slingbox [multichannel.com] • Disney launching branded streaming media box [tomsguide.com] • ILSR Creates Useful Map and List of Municipal Broadband Networks [telecompetitor.com] • Yahoo! is dead, will now be called ‘Altaba'; CEO Marissa Mayer to step down [ibtimes.co.uk]AT&T continues to quickly hike the cost of unlimited data in order to drive its dwindling grandfathered unlimited data users to metered plans. Users in our forums say they're being notified of a $5 bump in the cost of unlimited data starting in March of 2017. Representative Marsha Blackburn (R, TN), one of the Senate's biggest critics of net neutrality and local community broadband rights, has been appointed the new chairperson of a key Congressional telecommunications subcommittee. Blackburn will chair the House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Communications and Technology, according to a committee announcement. AT&T is looking to avoid any FCC scrutiny of its planned $100 billion acquisition of Time Warner. We had already noted how the FCC might not even be involved in reviewing the transaction due to its heavy media focus.
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