PC Magazine - USA (2020-10)

(Antfer) #1

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reuses it all for mid-band 5G. That very well may be the
case, and the results we see from Philadelphia and
Washington are hopeful. But for now, it’s struggling a
little in the transition phase.


It’s worth mentioning that neither AT&T’s nor
T-Mobile’s 5G networks are faster than the Bell and
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to outpace our 5G technologies without a lick of 5G.


So you have to ask, why are AT&T and T-Mobile even
bothering, other than their desire to market that they
have 5G? Marketing is a big deal, but I believe their
engineers when they tell me that it just comes down to
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they install new network hardware, it’s all 5G-capable,
so they might as well turn it on.


I’m talking a lot about 5G in this piece when the US
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5G adoption is going to rise sharply over the next year,
whether or not you’re actually seeking a 5G phone.


T-Mobile says
its customers
will benefit
as it clears
out Sprint’s
mid-band 4G
spectrum and
reuses it all for
mid-band 5G.
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