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"Sprint's LTE network will be fine on day one," said Roger Entner, founder of Recon Analytics. "But they're going to have to buy more spectrum, because in two or three years, what they have will not be enough. The PCS H block would be a nice complement for Sprint, but there's going to be a lot of interest for this spectrum."Sprint's 4G saga. In 2008, Sprint formed a joint venture with Clearwire that combined the companie's wireless spectrum assets to build a 4G wireless network using a technology called WiMax. The idea was that Sprint, along with other potential wholesale partners, would use the Clearwire network to provide 4G service. And for the past four years, Sprint has offered 4G WiMax services via the Clearwire network.
But over the years, it's become clear that LTE and not WiMax will atlantic morning iphone case be the global technology of choice for mobile broadband, Clearwire has said it is switching gears to upgrade its network to LTE, but it won't be quickly enough for Sprint, Plus, after a series of missteps Clearwire's network is in financial trouble, And it's unclear whether the network will ever get fully built due the problems it faces, Then there was LightSquared, Sprint's second wholesale partner, This company led by hedge fund investor Philip Falcone, planned to build a nationwide 4G LTE network using satellite spectrum, Sprint signed a network-sharing deal with LightSquared in July, The carrier hoped LightSquared's network would jump-start its 4G LTE offering, since the network was expected to be up and running in certain cities by the end of 2012, But politics and claims of GPS interference crushed LightSquared, And after a year-long fight in Washington, D.C., and in the press, the Federal Communications Commission pulled the company's conditional license, leaving Sprint once again in the lurch..
Recognizing that it needed to get into the LTE game and fast, Sprint decided to use its remaining PCS spectrum to start building its own 4G LTE network. In October, Sprint announced plans to launch its next-generation network, which the company hopes will cover 120 million people by the end of this year, and about 250 million people when the network is finished in 2013. Sprint devices supporting LTE should start rolling out this summer. Sprint's dilemma. Sprint, which was once flush with wireless spectrum, would have been able to build an LTE network with twice the amount of spectrum as its competitors, had it not given a huge chunk of it to Clearwire as part of the joint venture.
Now, Clearwire has more than 100 MHz of spectrum in the 2.5 GHz frequency throughout most of the U.S, And it has more than 130 MHz in some larger markets, While this isn't the best-quality spectrum, since it doesn't penetrate walls easily and propagates over shorter distances, requiring more cell sites, it's still decent spectrum for covering many densely populated urban and suburban areas, But due to the deal with Clearwire, that spectrum is not accessible to Sprint for its new 4G LTE network, Buying MetroPCS could have also given Sprint additional PCS atlantic morning iphone case spectrum it could use for 4G LTE, especially in urban areas, And a T-Mobile network-sharing arrangement may also have helped the company free up additional spectrum and lower its cost base to address potential capacity constraints on its upcoming LTE network..
The PCS H block of spectrum is ideal for Sprint, because it could work perfectly with the airwaves Sprint is already using for its LTE network. Sprint is using two 5 MHz slivers of spectrum called PCS "G" block, which it got through its 2005 acquisition of Nextel, to build the LTE network. The big question remains whether or not Sprint will actually get any of this spectrum. The rules of the auction have not yet been written. It's very likely that the licenses for the PCS H block will be divided up geographically. Sprint needs nationwide coverage. So if that's the case, it would need to win licenses in every region.
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