Trending News

Verizon Rolls Out 50% Faster Peak Wireless Data Speed Due To LTE-Advanced Network

By

The telecommunications company Verizon Wireless, announced a new marketing push for LTE Advanced technology. The new mobile communication standard brings 50 percent faster peak wireless data speeds that covers 461 United States cities.

The company marks LTE Advanced, which is a major enhancement of the Long Term Evolution (LTE) standard, as the latest improvement on current 4G LTE technology. Besides a collection of major United States cities, Verizon LTE Advanced will also cover loads of less-served locations such as interstates, country roads, as well as highways and rural America, according to Mac Rumors.

Verizon's LTE Advanced upgrades will be offered to customers at no additional cost, but the speed boosts and coverage will actually happen when a person need it most. On the carrier's network, LTE Advanced is already up and running on one of 39 devices, such as the Moto Droid, iPhone, as well as Galaxy S6 and S7.

Nicki Palmer, Verizon's chief wireless network engineer, stated that Verizon LTE Advanced means a person's data session works more quickly over the best network.

The new mobile communication standard is the more powerful version of the legacy LTE network, that offers greater speed and network capacity. Carrier aggregation is the most important part of LTE-Advanced technology, as wireless operators will have the means to create large spectrum assets by integrating different frequency bands, based on the report of Zacks.

Two frequency bands will let consumers enjoy a download speed up to 225 Mbps and three bands can provide as much as 300 Mbps. Where a typical download speed should remain 5Mbps to 12Mbps, PC World reported.

Whenever Apple Inc., Samsung, and other tech companies will release new smartphones, the devices will support Verizon's new LTE Advanced service out of the box. While the pre-existing smartphones on Verizon plans will automatically grab the upgrade with no extra plan costs.

Watch The Video Here:

© 2024 University Herald, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.
Join the Discussion
Real Time Analytics