Ofcom To Open Up Frequencies For Mobile Broadband

Nov 20, 2014

Ofcom has announced it will soon make more frequencies available to mobile broadband, resulting in increased speeds and a cheaper service.

By using the 700MHz frequency band, currently in use by wireless microphones and digital terrestrial TV broadcasts, consumers in rural areas should also receive improved coverage.

Read more: Virgin Media supercharges Glasgow with high-speed broadband expansion

The communications regulator said the service should be ready for launch by the start of 2020, but added that it could be available as soon as 2018.

Telecoms expert Dominic Baliszewski said that the increased capacity and speeds provided by the new frequencies will give mobile data services the potential to match fixed line broadband.

“The real question is whether mobile broadband will ever replace fixed line broadband,” he said. “With 4G customers already experiencing an average speed of 15Mb, this is already good enough to serve most people’s home broadband needs. The limiting factors at present are availability, price and constraints on download limits – both of which will be addressed, at least in part, by the freeing up of the 700MHz band.”

Data being transmitted across the new frequency band is better at passing through walls and travelling longer distances, meaning rural customers, in particular, could benefit.

Ofcom’s chief executive Ed Richards believes the development could bring wide-ranging benefits to the entire UK population.

Read more: UK broadband “unambitious and inadequate”




Author: Barclay Ballard
View the original article here.
Published under license from ITProPortal.com

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