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Are We Ready For 5G Phones? 85

Next-generation 5G networks are very much in their infancy right now, but that's not stopping smartphone manufacturers from teasing new 5G phones. At Samsung's Galaxy S10 launch event today, Samsung teased the Galaxy S10 5G, a top-tier model of the Galaxy S10 that offers 5G mobile data connectivity. "The device, which has a larger screen and battery than the S10 Plus, will temporarily be a Verizon Wireless exclusive before expanding to other carriers in the weeks after launch," reports The Verge. "It will go on sale sometime 'in the first half of 2019."

Late last year, LG confirmed that its first U.S. 5G phone would debut on Sprint "in the first half of 2019," just as Sprint launches its 5G network. At around the same time, Lenovo unveiled the Moto Z3, a phone that only connects to 5G with a MotoMod modular accessory. It too is expected to arrive early this year -- but there's no mention of how much it'll cost. OnePlus, Nokia, and Huawei are also working on 5G phones expected to arrive sometime this year. The question is: are we ready for 5G phones? Three of the four largest carriers in the U.S. have only just started offering 5G service in select cities. Sprint, the fourth largest U.S. telecommunications company, hasn't even reached this step. Just like the first 4G phones to hit the market, these first-of-their-kind 5G devices look to merely symbolize what the next decade of mobile computing has in store.
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Are We Ready For 5G Phones?

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  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @06:55PM (#58154688)

    I hear their 5Ge phones work great -- just as well as their 4G / LTE phones!

    [ Personally, I don't think AT&T can get dumped on enough for this crap... ]

    • by zlives ( 2009072 )

      3 out of 4 carriers, not just ATT
      i am sure in a couple years when "only" 5g is supported the 4G will all have to be traded in for new phones.

  • by bobbied ( 2522392 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @07:01PM (#58154726)

    The chip sets are shipping, phones are being engineered and built, carriers are buying spectrum space, vendors are starting to ship the equipment and the marketing blitz is already on.

    It doesn't matter if you are ready or not, it's going to happen unless there is some huge unforeseen world/national event that makes it financially impossible. It's happening, like it or not.

    • by zlives ( 2009072 )

      so who is asking for this?

    • The chip sets are shipping, phones are being engineered and built, carriers are buying spectrum space, vendors are starting to ship the equipment and the marketing blitz is already on.

      It doesn't matter if you are ready or not, it's going to happen unless there is some huge unforeseen world/national event that makes it financially impossible. It's happening, like it or not.

      Where is it happening? 4g networks only partially qualify for the 4g defintion right now. 4g networks are supposed to be 10Mb minimum (OK we hit that), 100Mb typical with speeds up to 1Gb. The best downloads per tomshardware are 85Mb which is not enough to meet the average 4g defintion. Verizon's average is 53.3, which is half the 4g definition.

      https://pdfs.semanticscholar.o... [semanticscholar.org]
      https://www.tomsguide.com/us/b... [tomsguide.com]

      • The best downloads per tomshardware are 85Mb which is not enough to meet the average 4g defintion. Verizon's average is 53.3, which is half the 4g definition.

        And despite that, I can't think the last time I thought "this is taking too long to download" or "I wish I had faster download speeds" - on my phone at least. Faster is obviously better- and IF 5G is faster that will be great... but I'm not willing to fork out a lot of extra money for it. If costs are comparable I'm on board, if not... I'm not concerned.

        I AM concerned though, if as some reports state, that 5G stops working when it rains. I'll stick with 4G if 5G is unreliable. I won't be a first adopter

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I'm constantly finding 4G networks to be too slow, even for basic browsing. Maybe you live in a sparsely populated area or something, but around here it's a toxic mix of over-subscription and poor signal.

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              Whatever the issue is, when here is a lot of traffic on the motorway I can't even stream low bitrate talk radio. Often the phone just loses connection to the tower entirely. I think it's over-subscription, because everything is fine when traffic is light.

          • Funny, I live in San Diego and as long as I'm not out of 4g data for the month, download speeds (aka website load times) are never a problem. The one exception is a particular blog I read, but it's slow on my desktop so that's probably them going with a cheaper hosting option and not my ISP.

            Maybe you live somewhere ultra-populated that there just isn't enough spectrum to properly serve all the customers.

            I'm on Verizon for what its worth. They cost to much but I pretty much always have a signal, even on vaca

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      The chip sets are shipping, phones are being engineered and built, carriers are buying spectrum space, vendors are starting to ship the equipment and the marketing blitz is already on.

      It doesn't matter if you are ready or not, it's going to happen unless there is some huge unforeseen world/national event that makes it financially impossible. It's happening, like it or not.

      That isn't the question.

      Sure it's being shipped, but will it be bought. The problem you've got is that 5G offers no advantages over 4G LTE and that hasn't even finished rolling out yet. 4G is already fast enough that data caps can't keep up with it. Besides all the speed in the world will not help you in the middle of London or New York where towers are horribly congested (even in Basingstoke town centre it's terrible).

      • Well, my point really was, it doesn't matter if we are ready, it's going to happen. Asking the question is pointless as is discussing why we should or shouldn't do it as if we could stop the speeding train.

        The ship has sailed, the train has left the station, you cannot stop it now, there's no going back.... No need to worry about stuff you cannot control or stop.

    • by Stan42 ( 5773912 )
      Is the "The Fugees" ? ^ ^
  • Serious question. I have an S4 and it's time to upgrade after 6 years and some flakiness lately. So the S10 will likely be my phone for another six years. Is 5G really close enough to get the capability, or will it be six years before it is worthwhile? I do not live in a heavily urban area, so there is that. TIA

    • by olsmeister ( 1488789 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @07:17PM (#58154846)
      first gen 5g phones are gonna suck through battery like crazy. I wouldn't get one until the 5g modem can be integrated and doesn't need to be separate. Probably best to hold off [arstechnica.com] for a year or so to technology mature.
    • I went from 4 to 7 two years ago, and I've been really, really happy with the S7. At this point I'm considering jumping to the S9 in 6 months or so, once the price drops. I'm not considering jumping to the 10. Too expensive, and it doesn't offer enough over the 9 to make the price worthwhile.

  • by nwaack ( 3482871 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @07:07PM (#58154790)
    So at the current mobile data rates and caps, mobile carriers will either have to charge 100's of dollars for a single 5G plan (maybe 1000+), or admit that they've been price gouging for mobile data for many years.
  • Get a MiFi for whatever the current name is.
    This will allow your phone, tablet, laptop, gaming console, etc, to be online for less than a typical voice plan.
    Want a sleek phone for a night out and a rugged one for a day on the construction site? They'll both work with the MiFi.
    Getting a SIP/VoIP number, if you don't want Google Voice, is easier than ever.

  • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @07:14PM (#58154828)
    Given the scarce data volumes sold at outrageous prices, 3G was already fast enough to exploit one's "included volume" quickly. When 4G became active, I hardly noticed any difference - the phone was usable for the same kinds of use cases as before, and unusable because of price per volume for everything else. I do not see how 5G is going to change that. Does it matter if it takes a few minutes or a few seconds to burn through your traffic-per-month?
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      But 5G is fast for everyone on the same tower. Really fast all the time.
      One tower, many users.
      • by ffkom ( 3519199 )

        But 5G is fast for everyone on the same tower. Really fast all the time. One tower, many users.

        Ok, then sell me a contract where I get an uncapped bandwidth all the time of 0.001 times the bandwidth that one tower can transfer - should be fair enough, right?

        In reality, you will find that no provider will sell you such a contract. They still want back to the days were every 140 byte short message earned them 29 cents.

        • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
          The really great idea with 5G was to have many towers and EXTRA BIG tubes connecting the towers to the telco and wider internet.
          This time the EXTRA BIG tubes would actually be in place and not just be all marketing after the real-world tests.
          • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @10:11PM (#58155664)
            You mean like GPRS really bringing the success for WAP, like Edge satisfying all our bandwidth needs, like UMTS bringing blazingly fast data plus ultra high quality voice connections to everyone, and like 4G "LTE" bringing a "Long Term Evolution"?

            Sorry, but there is no reason to believe in the next of those hypes. There is no obstacle to connect LTE towers with "extra big tubes", if that is what carriers wanted. What they really want is people spending more money on data transfers, while limiting their investments as much as possible.
            • by mjwx ( 966435 )

              You mean like GPRS really bringing the success for WAP, like Edge satisfying all our bandwidth needs, like UMTS bringing blazingly fast data plus ultra high quality voice connections to everyone, and like 4G "LTE" bringing a "Long Term Evolution"?

              Sorry, but there is no reason to believe in the next of those hypes. There is no obstacle to connect LTE towers with "extra big tubes", if that is what carriers wanted. What they really want is people spending more money on data transfers, while limiting their investments as much as possible.

              The problem isn't the backbone, its congestion. With a mobile connection you've only got so much bandwidth to play with. Usually bandwidth is about 50-80 MHz for Frequency Division Duplexing to be shared amongst every single device connected to that cell. This means that you're going to be queuing a lot when you get a lot of devices. It doesn't matter how fast LTE is (and lets face it, even at 50mbps, its pretty fast) it's going to feel slow because you're in a queue waiting for bandwidth.

              This is why I

              • by satsuke ( 263225 )

                50-80mhz is not common .. at least in the US, the FDD allocations are more like 5x5, 10x10, 15x15 and rarely 20x20.

                Carrier aggregation is a thing, but different frequency bands have different characteristics, and a mobile antenna is only _so_ versatile.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        But 5G is fast for everyone on the same tower. Really fast all the time.
        One tower, many users.

        Or tons of towers, not so many users. One of the 5G improvements means there literally is a tower at every streetlight. This is because the band used is so high that there isn't much propagation, so you need a ton of base stations.

        You're literally going to be surrounded by 5G transmitters as you walk down the street.

        Sure, there are lower bands for more "traditional" cell tower usage, but inside an urban jungle, car

    • You're focused on throughput to the exclusion of latency. The latter makes a big difference, particularly for things like web browsing where it can take dozens of transactions before a page can be fully displayed.

    • by _merlin ( 160982 )

      Most noticeable thing for me with the WCDMA HSPA (3G) to LTE (4G) transition was better battery life and the phone not running so hot when using mobile data. The latency is better, but it was already acceptable with 3G.

  • So, what... we'll then be able to burn through our data caps in only a few minutes?

    • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
      Not in minutes, in a few seconds. Current 5G chips have been measured to deliver up to 7 GBit/s.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Clearly the push for 5G is driven by potential profit.
    That is the nature of our world.
    But how does 5G provide this new cash?

    Will it just force consumers to buy more expensive services and equipment?
    Or will it offer such a wonderful future that consumers will demand it?

    The Comms business seems like the IRS - everytime they make a change, we end up paying more.

  • Hardware is ready for consumer. With real "5" and "G" GUI letters to show working 5G.
    Tower is in place for telco.
    People know of the "internet" so the content is not new.
    Faster networks is the only thing to consider.
    Got the super fast new networks from the 5G tower needed to keep up with all the users doing fast internet all day at the same time?
    Did your telco make the extra large network investment?
    Well did it?
    5G, 5G, save me with the smartphone and the lag, lag, lag.
  • Once 5G comes out I wonder how much an "unlimited data" plan becomes. 5GB? 10GB? 1TB?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @08:17PM (#58155172)

    My "4G" enabled Moto G6 has a big "LTE" logo next to the signal bars. Didn't that stand for Long Term Evolution? Wasn't it supposed to mean that they would eventually give us real 4G speeds if we all bought modems and handsets first?

    WTF ever happened to FINISHING the 4G rollout?

  • 15GB cap is not going to replace home Internet att much less an $500 modem

    https://www.anandtech.com/show... [anandtech.com]

  • I'll be out of my 'unlimited downloads' in minutes instead of hours that month.

  • by acoustix ( 123925 ) on Thursday February 21, 2019 @09:51AM (#58157376)

    ...is that even on 4G in the U.S. we aren't getting close to the speeds that were originally promised for 3G. With 3G we were promised speeds as fast a 100mbps and in reality is was maybe 3-5mbps. Now with 4G most markets won't deliver speeds close to half of that. And now we're told that 5G will be able to replace dedicated circuits with the same speed and reliability? I call BS. I am VERY skeptical.

  • I have an 8GB/month plan, and that's actually quite large for a Canadian consumer. There are very few plans larger than that, and they cost an arm and a leg. I'm already really stingy with downloading things just so I can make sure I'm not paying overages. What the hell do I care about a faster network? I don't want to get through this data any faster, and frankly, I don't have a lot more I can download. I spend a lot of time in wifi range (though my mobile data is more reliable than a lot of those wifi ne

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