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Cellphones Communications Network Wireless Networking

More Than 1 Billion People Expected To Be Using 5G By Year's End 55

More than 1 billion people will be connected to 5G by the end of 2022, according to the latest mobility report from Ericsson. CNET reports: Between July and September of this year, 5G added 110 million subscribers around the world, upping the total count to 870 million, said the report, released Wednesday. That's almost double the number of 5G subscribers there were by the end of 2021, which the Swedish telecommunications equipment maker estimated to be 580 million. If 5G users hit the 1 billion this year, that means fifth-generation networks will have hit the nine-figure subscriber mark two years faster than 4G did, said Ericsson, confirming that 5G is so far the "fastest-scaling mobile connectivity generation."

4G subscriptions are still growing as well, with 41 million subscribers added between July and September. It's anticipated they will peak at 5.2 billion by the end of the year, and mobile subscriptions overall are forecast to exceed 8.4 billion. By 2028, 5G is expected to reach 5 billion subscriptions globally and make up 55% of all network subscriptions, according to the report. Overall mobile subscriptions in 2028 are expected to be more than 9.2 billion.
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More Than 1 Billion People Expected To Be Using 5G By Year's End

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  • by illogicalpremise ( 1720634 ) on Thursday December 01, 2022 @05:03AM (#63093128)

    Think I'll need a thicker tin-foil hat

  • Paying stupidly high amounts of money for a tracking device.
  • For me, I see little incentive to move from 4G to 5G, there may be a speed increase, but not as dramatic as GPRS to 3G. Back when I moved from 3G to 4G it was natural, a breeze: my phone was already supporting the new standard and the carrier offered a better plan, "unlimited" on 4G versus 2 or 3 GB on 3G at the same price (not sure what is the limit on "unlimited", definitely more than 7 GB that I used the most so far).

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Plenty of people will just get a new phone (possibly "free" with their plan), which will support "5G", and off they go. That's how you get such adoption numbers, because end users are not flocking to the tech itself. They don't care. They just care about their cat videos.

      There may be some complaints of mysteriously running out of data allowances much sooner in the month, though. But as long as those are nicely spread out, most people will just cough up some dosh for an extension or a larger allowance. Payi

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      What 5G has done, though, has been to increase the size of newer smartphone models because it requires more power and therefore larger batteries.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday December 01, 2022 @07:12AM (#63093284)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • 5G is nice if I'm in that area with strong singals! For me, connections got worse for cellular in my rural area. Old iPhone 4S and 6 + had more stabilities. 11 Pro Max was a little worse, but still OK. 12 mini and 13 are awful. :(

    • The speed increase is not very noticable on typical phone use. In addition, the speed drops to crappy low speeds when you're at the edge of the base station's range, which is quite a bit smaller for 5G.

      I wish my phone had a setting to fall back to 4G if 5G reception drops to 2 bars or lower. The same for WiFi by the way, the phone will cling like mad to a tenuous WiFi connection instead of just giving up and switching to cellular data.
    • by fazig ( 2909523 )
      Personally, I don't need it either and I will go for a phone without 5G if it costs less and or has other features that are compelling vs the 5G version (like higher capacity battery, "better" screen, "better" camera, better CPU/GPU, more memory/storage and so forth).
      But the day will come when there's no newer phones that come without 5G and then it's no longer a price factor to consider.

      Until then, I don't really see the need for a mobile device. Like my phones have FullHD displays (a bit higher) and st
  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Thursday December 01, 2022 @06:43AM (#63093240) Homepage

    1 billion perfectly good phones have been junked recently either to the cupboard or worse landfill. For what? TO be able to download a film in seconds (which almost no one ever does)? For fixed wireless data links 5G is perfect, but for mobile phones they're a virtual irrelevance.

    • The article doesn't say and it's highly unlikely that all of those 5G phones replace perfectly usable 3G or 4G phones. When people buy new phones for whatever reason, they are likely to get a 5G capable phones now. It's like people did not throw out Windows 7 PCs to upgrade to Windows 8, but Windows 8 gained market share anyway, because it's what you got with a new PC.

      Also, while the ads focus on the transfer speeds like they're individually important, the main point of faster mobile networks is the increa
      • I bought a 5g capable "smart" phone specifically to replace my obsoleted, but still perfectly usable 3G phone. I hate it. So my 3G phone sits on my desk, an example of forced obsolescence and a mandatory "upgrade".

        I have to wonder how much longer my 4G mobile wi-fi hot spot will remain usable before the carriers decide that I need to "upgrade" to 5G.

        And of course, the treadmill will never end, along with the stream of e-waste that results from it.
    • 1 billion perfectly good phones have been junked

      What makes you say that? A good many people will be making the switch to 5G as part of nothing more than the natural course of replacing their old phones. Nothing more. I'd have a 5G phone now if my previous phone broke only 2 months later. As it stands turns out my girlfriend does.

      No one is junking perfectly good 4G phones just to upgrade to 5G. They may junk them for other reasons, but 5G has nothing to do with it.

  • The remaining 7 billion people will get a life.
  • I bought a 4G phone a couple of years ago. It now sometimes says it's 5G. The miracle of AT&T!

  • I have a 5G phone with a 5G subscription, 'cause that didn't cost any more. However, it's never once actually achieved 5G. There aren't enough cell towers in my area. If the cell company deprecates "lower levels" of service, my cell phone goes dead, and they lose their contract.

    This 5G advertising feels like one of those Bing scams, where Microsoft pays lots of people to use their search engine to inflate their ratings. (You can probably still get in on this, although it runs maybe $5/month for using their

    • I have only seen the "5G" indicator on my phone ONCE - while sitting in a jet that was taxiing on a runway at a major airport.

      Oh the IRONY of it all

  • Since this seems to be a giant conspiracy theory thread, I will add my 2 cents. I heard from a reliable source that the earth is flat.
  • We don't have 5G where I live, I was spending three weeks in Phoenix in areas with and without 5G and the rate it was killing the battery in my iPhone 13 Mini, one year old next month, was ridiculous! I don't need the speed, I'll leave it off until someone proves that I need it. I live in extremely rural New Mexico, it's going to take a long time for 5G to extend out here.
  • I wonder how much non-essential e-waste was created by this non-essential upgrade...
  • Don't take my word for it, watch Conspiracy Music Guru. He is always right.
    Seriously, the guy is amazingly talented, and well worth watching.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKYN3-GB7y0

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