
US
Kansas : Sprint announced aggressive plans for the expansion and evolution
of the Sprint Power Vision(SM) network which now covers over half
of the U.S. population with mobile broadband data services. By year
end 2006 the high-speed wireless network is expected to reach an estimated
190 million people nationwide and in Puerto Rico, making it the largest
mobility network of its kind. Sprint will concurrently implement second-generation
technology upgrades later this year known as EV-DO Revision A, to
bring additional mobility benefits to users beginning in 1Q 2007.
Sprint plans to reach about 220 million people in the U.S. with the
advanced network by the end of 3Q '07.
Sprint today has the most
wireless broadband coverage of any carrier. Sprint mobile broadband
services, which run on the Sprint Power Vision network, cover over
150 million people and serve customers in 215 communities with at
least 100,000 population, as well as 470 airports across the country.
Users currently access various audio, video and data applications
with handheld and connection-card devices at average download speeds
equivalent to DSL (400-700 kbps and peak speeds up to 2 Mbps). With
the evolution to EV-DO Revision A, users will experience downloads
and uploads up to 10 times faster. "Sprint is a mobility services
company and mobile broadband leader," remarked Kathy Walker,
Chief Network Officer. "We plan to extend that lead through a
complete overlay of our Sprint EV-DO network with Revision A technology
by the end of 3Q 2007, to provide customers an enriched mobile multimedia
experience."
Sprint will demonstrate
EV-DO Revision A connection card technology at the CTIA Wireless Show
in Las Vegas (booth 1439) with industry partners Nortel, Novatel Wireless
and Sierra Wireless. Sprint will market EV-DO Revision A compatible
connection cards in the third quarter of 2006, which work on the current
Revision O network until next-generation service is broadly available
in the first quarter 2007 to about 214 million people.
"Sprint has
an aggressive plan for mobile broadband service leadership, by broadening
their footprint and deploying advanced technology thatdrives mobility,"
commented Gene Signorini, Director, Wireless/Mobile Enterprise Solutions
at Yankee Group. "This announcement keeps Sprint in the forefront
in meeting the demand for mobility services. Given the importance
of high speed data services as a revenue source, this is a bold and
rewarding move."
With Revision
A technology, peak download data rates increase to 3.1 Mbps (from
2.0) and peak upload data rates increase to 1.8 Mbps (from 144 kbps).
Average download speeds improve to 450-800 kbps (from 400 -700) and
average uplink speeds become 300 - 400 kpbs (versus 70 - 144 kpbs).
The faster data rates can enable richer applications andservices such
as high-speed video telephony, music on demand, video messaging, large
file uploads and high performance push-to-talk capability.
"This aggressive
move by Sprint should further accelerate the company's momentum in
wireless broadband services," said Bob Egan, Director, Emerging
Technologies, TowerGroup. "Enterprises and consumers alike have
an insatiable appetite for network access availability, speed and
quality. This is an important move by a company who is very serious
about raising the industry bar and meeting the important and dynamic
requirements of its business and consumeconstituencies," Egan
said.
The power of Sprint
networks make it best positioned to deliver unmatched mobility products
and services for customer solutions. Wireless broadband customers
can currently access the mobility network with the Sprint PCS Vision
Smart Device (PPC 6700) and Sprint PCS Connection Cards Novatel Wireless
620, Sierra Wireless 580 and PC 5740. Panasonic Toughbook PC models
(18, 29 and 73) also have embedded EV DO Sprint Power Vision capability
for Sprint network access. Consumer data devices include Sprint Power
Vision phones from Samsung (A900 and A920) and the MM 7500 by Sanyo.