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Ariella
Ariella
1/9/2018 3:09:19 PM
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Re: AT&T Positioning
@mhhf1ve they also will have the excuse that the supporting equipment and other necessary components aren't yet in place to demonstrate the full potential of 5G's effect.

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mhhf1ve
mhhf1ve
1/9/2018 3:06:27 PM
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Re: AT&T Positioning
I'm skeptical of "true" 5G rollouts in 2018.. Limited tests are bound to be deployed, but regular consumers aren't even going to have the hardware to use 5G for a while.

Also.. 4G was supposed to allow for 100Mbps when moving and 1Gbps when stationary -- and that isn't exactly what anyone expects from their latest device yet. So... even if 5G arrives early, I'm guessing it'll be a bit slower and less shiny that the press releases have hyped so far.

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mpouraryan
mpouraryan
1/9/2018 2:41:21 PM
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Re: AT&T Positioning
Here is a question for all within the broad context of deliberations here--a question of trust in the end--isn't it?
https://twitter.com/ft/status/930593774975225856

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Ariella
Ariella
1/9/2018 2:38:02 PM
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Re: AT&T Positioning
Well AT&T is claiming that it will roll out 5G this year and says it intends to be first. We'll have to see if any other carrier beats it to the punch.

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Ariella
Ariella
1/9/2018 2:38:01 PM
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Re: AT&T Positioning
Well AT&T is claiming that it will roll out 5G this year and says it intends to be first. We'll have to see if any other carrier beats it to the punch.

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mhhf1ve
mhhf1ve
1/9/2018 2:04:13 PM
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Re: AT&T Positioning
> "Personally, AT&T is the first company that comes to mind when I think of 5G deployment.."

I tend to think that T-mobile will be the first to "consumer" 5G because it's trying to roll out 5G on its newly acquired spectrum. Maybe it will stumble in its 2020 goal to deploy 5G, but I've become somewhat skeptical of AT&T and Verizon's ability to deploy next-gen network tech "on time" according to their own press releases.

http://www.lightreading.com/mobile/5g/t-mobile-ceo-well-leapfrog-atandt-and-verizon-with-mobile-5g/d/d-id/739315

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mhhf1ve
mhhf1ve
1/9/2018 1:58:02 PM
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Platinum
Re: AT&T Positioning
> "do you think getting there first will prove a major advantage to a telcom?"

No. Not a "major" advantage. There's always some advantage to being a first mover, but in the telco world, I don't think there is a major advantage to being first in deploying a next-gen network like 5G (unless it's truly revolutionary, which 5G is not). The 5G standards are a pretty big bump in improvement over 4G, but it's not like it's leapfrogging fiber. So ISPs are going to do the same kind of marketing for 5G as they do with fiber -- some call it "fiber to the press release" (FTTPR) where the deployment schedules are highly optimistic and constantly delayed. 

Also, the ISPs are all relying on the same vendors for 5G equipment, so it's not like one ISP has some huge unfair advantage over others for deploying their network.

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Ariella
Ariella
1/8/2018 4:30:18 PM
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Re: AT&T Positioning
@mhhf1ve do you think getting there first will prove a major advantage to a telcom?

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mhhf1ve
mhhf1ve
1/8/2018 3:32:26 PM
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Platinum
Re: AT&T Positioning
All of the carriers are committed to improving their networks for the future. That isn't in question. The uncertainty is how fast they'll do it.. and what standard(s) will emerge in the process. 

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Ariella
Ariella
1/8/2018 12:10:01 PM
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Re: AT&T Positioning
@afwriter They certainly do seem to be fully committed to it. It will be exciting to see what happens.

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