We can hear you now: Verizon LTE to go live next year

By Tim Conneally | Published December 10, 2008, 3:35 PM

Verizon's Executive Vice President and CTO Dick Lynch yesterday said LTE is expected to launch in the US approximately one year from now.

The Third Generation Partnership Project's Long-Term Evolution, otherwise known simply as LTE, is the 4G iteration of GSM technology. Companies are beginning to show off their developing hardware platforms, but LTE has not yet been standardized and still generally considered to be in its infancy.

Top US wireless carrier Verizon announced its support for LTE nearly two years ago, and despite the numerous hurdles that must be passed before even the first deployment, a Verizon executive yesterday said we will begin to see LTE in service in 2009.

In the wake of LG's LTE unveiling yesterday, Executive Vice President and CTO of Verizon Communications, Dick Lynch discussed the standard at the at C-Scape global forum.

Lynch said, "We expect that LTE will actually be in service somewhere here in the US probably this time next year." This would be remarkably early even for a launch, as 2010 was the earliest prior estimate.

Lynch went on to discuss how the LTE rollout will incorporate femtocell access points, "A femtocell of LTE or an access point of Wi-Fi is a really critical component of the way customers want their broadband delivered." Femtocell devices behave like miniature cell towers, and are offered by Sprint for extending CDMA signals in the home. AT&T has reportedly been testing the technology as well, with executives from that company saying yesterday that it plans to roll out expanded femtocell tests in more US markets next year.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

I'll believe it when I see it. And by live I hope they mean in a real city with realistic coverage and handsets available to purchase.

Score: 0

|

Palm posts third quarter results: disappointing sales, more net loss

Palm may be doing better this year than it did last year, but with only 42% sellthrough for the quarter, there's plenty of room for improvement.

Kindle for Mac released: Is Amazon's e-reader moving away from hardware?

Today, Amazon announced Kindle for Mac, the latest addition to the family of free Kindle software.

Microsoft cuts and pastes an egg

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: We've listened to our mobile customers, said Microsoft, and cut-and-paste isn't what they want? Uh-huh. Right.

Google improves Maps for Android, rolls in bonus features

The search provider has improved page listings in Maps 4.1, adding a Latitude widget and live wallpaper.

Will Viacom's public airing of YouTube's dirty laundry change the Web forever?

If Viacom wins its summary judgment, will video services everywhere have to police their content for anything that may belong to a copyright holder?

Let the rejections begin: Apple opens first round of submissions for iPad App Store

In a message sent to developers today, Apple announced that it is now accepting iPad apps for the iTunes app store.

Viacom and YouTube: Timeline of pertinent events

The billion-dollar legal battle between Viacom and YouTube is in its third year, but the video site's run-ins with Viacom stretch back more than five years.

A tale of two "red alerts:" Which Windows warnings should you heed?

A pair of malware warnings are circulating worldwide, but after reading so many, they all seem alike. Sophos tells us to read them all more carefully.

Nvidia admits GeForce drivers responsible for fan problems, issues updates

It's the type of driver error you see less and less frequently, but after a few video cards were smoked, Nvidia has issued what it hopes will be a fix.

Netflix axes 'friends' feature due to unpopularity

After mysteriously disappearing from the Movie Detail page on Netflix, the Friends feature is in the process of being removed.

Preliminary results: IE9 tech preview performs 7.8 times better than IE8

There are indeed significant improvements made to the efficiency and processing power of Microsoft's next browser, though they're not across the board.