Verizon Will Launch 5G Home Internet Access In 2018 (engadget.com) 115
wyattstorch516 writes: Real competition may finally be on the way for the residential broadband market. Verizon will be the first company to introduce 5G wireless broadband in a select number of cities. This will give residential customers an alternative to cable/fiber offerings. 5G wireless can offer speeds in the range of hundreds of megabits per second. Full technical specifications as well as pricing plans have yet to be determined. The launch is scheduled for the second half of 2018.
Latency and Monthly Bandwidth (Score:5, Insightful)
This will depend on monthly bandwidth allotments, and, to a lesser extent, latency.
If you can't pull down 500GB a month at a reasonable cost, there will be no competition. End of story.
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Wtf? In other words, if you can't provide a service, you won't profit.
So apparently you are missing out on the new Trump administration thing where they pay you to fix the power lines but you don't actually have to do anything.
Compare to LTE Internet Installed (Score:2)
The fear is that Verizon Wireless will offer and deliver non-service and use deceptive marketing to convince the public that the non-service is service.
Verizon already offers LTE Internet Installed [verizonwireless.com] as a substitute for wired broadband in areas within its LTE service footprint but outside that of wired broadband ISPs. But compared to wired broadband, the monthly data allowance is a pittance for a family in 2017 even on the most expensive plan: $150 per month for 40 GB per month.
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Re:Latency and Monthly Bandwidth (Score:5, Insightful)
It will be like cable. Lots of bandwidth at the start, user is very happy. Later everyone uses it, more and more of the fixed bandwidth gets used by the neighbors, original user is pissed that performance has gone down.
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Good joke. This is Verizon so you’ll get 2 GB of data to start off with at teice the cost of a landline ISP.
Re:Latency and Monthly Bandwidth (Score:4, Interesting)
He's right, you know... Verizon's 4G LTE network was pretty awesome early on, until Apple released an iPhone with an LTE radio and the network slowed down for awhile due to all of the extra traffic. I think that was around the same time they started killing off the grandfathered $30 a month unlimited data plans as well.
I'd imagine that the first handful of 5G home subscribers will have a similar experience until 5G smartphones become popular. Then they will probably start cutting data plans for people "abusing" the system by downloading 300+ GB of a data a month from 4K Netflix streaming and a few game downloads.
Re:Latency and Monthly Bandwidth (Score:5, Insightful)
first handful of 5G home subscribers will have a similar experience until 5G smartphones become popular.
So in exchange for being fixed endpoints and not allowed to move; give the 5G home users priority on the network and apply all the restrictions and throttling to the actual smartphones. Because of the additional capacity 5G provides it should be fine providing they build out their networks adequately.
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Because people are not going to leave Spectrum/Grande/Comcast/whoever for a sub-adequate network.
They are trying to break into the home markets - they are not the current monopoly.
Due to local government regulations that even Google cannot overcome, we are not going to be getting more local wired internet companies - unless we lose those existing government regulations. What Verizion is doing is the market trying to correct against monopolies that the government enforces
I don't understand why people think
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Competition? What do you think this is? A polyopoly market?
Great. (Score:4, Interesting)
the MBA's need upto $10/GB overages (Score:2)
the MBA's need upto $10/GB overages with the base packing starting at about $40-$60/mo for 20GB-50GB
Re: Great. (Score:1)
Ajit Pai says this will happen next year as despite all the evidence contrary, after net neutrality is abolished Verizon will be running to spend as much as they can do develope infrastructure to rural America.
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You could install a WiMax basestation rural areas and have a line of sight microwave link to the nearest place you can get a wired internet connection, or to the next base station.
https://www.tutorialspoint.com... [tutorialspoint.com]
A WiMAX tower station can connect directly to the Internet using a high-bandwidth, wired connection (for example, a T3 line). It can also connect to another WiMAX tower using a line-of-sight microwave link.
Problem is of course that you'd need to make sure you had enough subscribers to make it profitable before you did it. On the upside you could spread out quite fast this way - so long as the base stations are either in WiMax or microwave range they can talk to each other. So initially you'd put th
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4G is better for BFE. 5G has more bandwidth, but shittier range and weather tolerance. Just based on carrier frequency. 3G is better still, it's a tradeoff between range and bandwidth. The best for you will be the highest bandwidth you can actually make work with reasonable height tower(s) (at 100 feet total height the FAA gets involved, basically requires lights.)
But by the time you need towers, you're almost certainly, out of 5G range. Especially if you don't want uncle Charlie hunting you...kilowatt l
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Extra details. Hold power constant and you, more or less, get down to my analysis. I did mention a kilowatt linear for the outlaws.
Fixed directional antenna's improve 5G, but don't do much for the higher frequencies weather tolerance. As you say 'direct relationship between frequency and maximum bandwidth.' Not exactly true, spread spectrum, anyhow. Whatever frequencies 5G runs on they (will be/are) higher than 4G and do worse through rain (all other thing being equal).
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You don't know who 'Uncle Charlie' is, but you post on /.?
Fucking millennials, get off my lawn.
'Uncle Charlie' is the FCC.
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The rural folks don't spend all day wishing they had faster internet access and think there are issues allot more important than this.
I mean really, lets have the government - whose regulations are the reason we have these monopolizes to begin with - add even more rules to "protect" the internet.
And how do you think this is going to be enforced? By giving the government complete access to what you are doing online to make sure you are not "throttled."
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Re: Great. (Score:1)
It is needed in cities for actual competition
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It’s a line-of-site service. It will eventually be available in rural areas with line of site to a mobile phone tower.
It's not competition.. (Score:5, Insightful)
If it's verizon offering it.
Wake me up when another company like google is allowed to even try.
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Wake me up when another company like google is allowed to even try.
Try? Google is already providing 1GB down/up fixed wireless service in seven major metro areas [telecompetitor.com].
Wake up.
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Wow seven whole cities?
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And not even to 15% of any of those cities. And given they have pulled back from some announced plans, they are about as reliable as Google has ever been. I am not sure I would sign up with them only because I have no guarantee they'll be in a location a year from now. I'm 100% sure Comcast will be.
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* whoosh *
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Anyone with wireless spectrum is allowed. Did Google buy spectrum at the spectrum auction?
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In theory you can.
In practice Verizon/AT&T/Comcast will just pay the local government and block your efforts with a freaking law.
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Local governments don't control wireless comms.
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Local governments don't control wireless comms.
They can block who can put up a tower.
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Lots of the towers already exist and are owned by 3rd parties like American Tower. It makes more financial sense for one tower company to rent antenna space to many companies than for comms companies to put up many redundant towers.
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And then the large monopoly ISPs buy up the tower space or in the case of WISPs using the ISM bands, place Canopy modems at strategic locations exchanging fake traffic to block point to point WiFi.
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And then the large monopoly ISPs buy up the tower space or in the case of WISPs using the ISM bands, place Canopy modems at strategic locations exchanging fake traffic to block point to point WiFi.
It's a better conspiracy story if there are shadowy assassins though.
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not in my basement. (Score:2)
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Perhaps, your cats will allow you to hang a booster upstairs.
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My understanding is '5G' isn't about phones. Requires a hard mounted directional antenna.
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Re:not in my basement. (Score:5, Funny)
My phone doesn't work in my basement, and I live in my basement. No, not my mom's basement, my wonderful, fully furnished basement. The cats live upstairs...
So, you live in your cats' basement? Is that supposed to be better?
Let the complaints begin... (Score:1)
I can't believe they are going to put caps on monthly BW. I am paying for 100Mb/s. Or... My ping times when everyone gets home and starts streaming netflix are terrible.
Wow! (Score:1)
There is a reason why Comcast was so eager to make me sign a new 12-year agreement. Hell, they even gave me the new customer price! Imagine that, comcast treating old (supposedly-loyal) paying customers as well as they treat new customers!
Go Slashdotters (Score:2)
It amazes me how many people on here don't seem to realize this has nothing to do with cell phones.
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It's a service delivered over the RF spectrum, so it is subject to the same vagaries as your cell phone. Interference, multipath reflection fading, overloaded hubs/sites all await. If it's this "5G" (whatever that is) or nothing that might be a viable choice, but it won't stand up well against any wired network, even Comcast's disaster of a network.
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Depends on how you define "stand up". It doesn't have the capacity or reliability of a wired network but if it can be sold at a much cheaper rate than cable it will stand up quite well.
I think if they can sell a $30/month plan with reasonable data limits then they will find a lot of takers.
Wat (Score:4, Insightful)
"Verizon Will Launch" "Real competition"
Does not compute
Fiber availability (Score:2)
I hope they won't use this as an excuse to cut back on fiber availability. Fiber is stable, isn't affected by interference, weather conditions (outside of damage to poles), etc, etc. It also provides a somewhat more secure channel.
Also: this should come first in rural areas that don't have any Internet options other than satellite -- this is the perfect tech for rural area where rolling out fiber infrastructure is expensive.
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I hope they won't use this as an excuse to cut back on fiber availability.
They don't need another excuse, Verizon has rescheduled all new FIOS installations until never.
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Verizon already halted fiber expansion and has been selling off parts of their landline installations. You’re quite behind the times.
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Fiber availability is still expanding in NYC. Thankfully.
Only because they are forced to. Thank your government and elected officials for doing their job.
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5G is the nickname for the technology... (Score:1)
your 5 gigabyte monthly usage limit,
and....
the 5 grand you'll pay in overages if your windows 10 system gets into a failed-update-redownload loop.
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5 GB? Pfffft, they’ll be lucky to get 2 GB with Verizon.
I'm not sure about the Verizon flavor but (Score:5, Interesting)
I believe the AT&T flavor of this is going to run somewhere in the 30ghz band ?
I -think- DirecTv works in the 18ghz band and anyone who has ever tried to watch the damn thing
during a rainstorm can see where my next question is going . . . . .
I am curious how well this technology is going to work when the weather decides not to play nice.
( Rain, fog, snow, etc )
Can one of you radio types enlighten me ?
Re:I'm not sure about the Verizon flavor but (Score:5, Informative)
The closer it gets to light, the more it acts like light.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Verizon's 30 GHz radio signal should work the same as physic's 30 GHz radio signal.
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On average it'll go ~ 100'. From the pole to a window. Fiber or something else on the poles.
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That's why verizon stopped with fios rollout. They deem going to the house with it cost prohibitive.
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A contractor for Verizon came to my neighborhood and pulled fiber throughout the entire neighborhood. I have a fiber connector at the end of my driveway. I could never get Verizon to connect up the last 50 feet to my house, nor could I get Verizon to admit that there was fiber in my neighborhood at all.
The trucks and digging machinery that came to my neighborhood all had signs attached to them that said Verizon contractor. I guess they were pulling it for AT&T or Comcast.
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Safety schmafety (Score:2)
Scuttle The Launch!!! (Score:3)
It's cell service not broadband (Score:3)
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It's a corporate on corporate fight here, no good sides.
A true good side would be focused on bringing actual competition to the american internet market.
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True. House Democrat has Google and Facebook as bannermen. House Republican has Comcast and Verizon. Neither care for smallfolk, whose only option is to be whores or sellswords in war between great feudal houses for control. Eventually winter will bring ice zombies from the frozen north and doom all of humanity.
Does it feel a bit chilly in here, or is it just me?
Re:No thank you to the "network nutrality" (Score:5, Funny)
Eventually winter will bring ice zombies from the frozen north and doom all of humanity.
Canadians aren't THAT bad.