Telstra To Roll Out 1000Mbps 4G (lifehacker.com.au) 68
An anonymous reader writes: After beginning support for LTE Category 9 last year on their 4Gx network (with its theoretical max download speed of 450Mbps), Telstra has now announced that they will upgrade their network to support LTE category 16. In theory, this means that if a customer has the correct equipment in the correct location, they will be able to have a maximum theoretical download speed of 1000Mbps, and a maximum theoretical upload speed of 150Mbps. Of course, it's unlikely that customers will be able to sustain these speeds, but Telstra lists on their website that 4GX devices currently have a typical download speed of 2 to 75Mbps on 4GX.
2 to 75 Mbps? (Score:1)
That pretty much covers all LTE phones.
Re:2 to 75 Mbps? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Really? My Telstra data keeps going up. Last contract it was 3gb a month, this contract at exactly the same $ is now 6gb and if you sign up today with a BYO phone you get 10gb for $60 a month with unlimited calls and texts..
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There is no doubt that they are expensive compared to the US. But the US mobile system is fucked with black holes all over the place and providers working on completely incompatible networks. Telstra might be expensive, but at least you have good coverage where ever there are people.
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8 seconds (Score:4, Funny)
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Well, it's good to see you get the point of the plan, it's a trap. Fail to pay attention for a few minutes and run up a bill of thousands of dollars. You can bet many lures will be built into the system to lead directly to those wallet crushing pit falls.
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Although I agree that these speeds are horribly disproportionate to current data rates from these carriers, I wanted to ask about this:
Fail to pay attention for a few minutes and run up a bill of thousands of dollars.
How does that actually happen with a smart phone? I mean it's not like you're going to download ISOs to your phone and even though Netflix is a data hog, you're still capped at the speed it takes to watch the video in real time. Honestly I'm not even sure how I'd make my phone eat up 10 gigs on purpose, let alone by accident.
Re:8 seconds (Score:4, Informative)
Mobile hotspot. ... etc.
For when you don't want to pay the outrageous wifi charges at a hotel conference center, or Starbucks' connection is flaky, or Charter / Comcast / Timewarner crashes for the evening and you have work to do, or
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If you're worried about how fast you'll hit the cap, then perhaps you should switch to a carrier and a plan that offers super slow speeds. Something like 56kbps. The old modem speed. Your cap will last way way longer. And I am guessing that will make you happier.
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If you're worried about how fast you'll hit the cap, then perhaps you should switch [...]
I don't think you realise how absurdly small the typical Australian data cap is, especially relative to the speed.
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At that speed, it would only take 8 seconds to consume my entire monthly 1GB data plan.
A good thing Smellstra's $30 prepaid plan now gives you 2.6 GB of data, so you've got a full 20.8 seconds.
I'm a happy Telstra customer... at least for the next few days. They already have the best LTE network in Perth, The work elevator is the only place I dont get coverage.
However with mobile speeds, you never get the full speed, it might be 1000 Mbps when you're 2 CM from the transmitter, but 1.5 KM away and you're getting a lot less.
So hit your 8GB cap in less then a hour? with $10/ (Score:2)
So hit your 8GB cap in less then a hour and with $10/GB overage how high can it go before the auto turn off kicks in $10,000?
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I don't know how there system is set up.
1000 Mbps? (Score:2)
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slightly less than 1Gbps
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Nope. Network speeds are power of 10.
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Well Optus have a 50GB plan but its speed capped to 12 Mbps.
Poor form (Score:2)
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5G is already being tested at 100gbps
Over lab distances of centimetres, with no interference or contention for spectrum. Things are a little different in the real world.
The only way anyone has managed to get 1Gbps rates outside the lab is by devoting huge chunks of spectrum to the link, and/or using line-of-sight frequencies that can barely penetrate paper (same as inside the lab). But these limitations make gigabit wireless unsuitable even for a few dozen mobile users in a typical cluttered cell footprint, let alone a couple hundred Netflix-s
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Re: Poor form (Score:2)
If you're worried how fast you'll hit the cap (Score:1, Troll)
If you're worried about how fast you'll hit the cap, then perhaps you should switch to a carrier and a plan that offers super slow speeds. Something like 56kbps. The old modem speed. Your cap will last way way longer. I am guessing that will make you happier.
Can't wait for the next "free data" day then... (Score:4, Interesting)
So the other Sunday when they had "Free Data", customers managed to download around 2000TB of data over the mobile network. Cranking the speed up some more should enable an even more impressive effort in internet binge downloading!
Refer: https://exchange.telstra.com.au/2016/02/15/big-day-of-free-data/
What G? (Score:3)
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