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T-Mobile USA has brought its
third-generation wireless network to the United States, launching the
service Monday in New York City. Other major cities will get "3G" coverage
later this year, the company said, confirming previously announced
plans.(File Photo) Photo
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BEIJING,
May 6 (Xinhuanet) -- T-Mobile USA has brought its third-generation wireless
network to the United States, launching the service Monday in New York City.
Other major cities will get "3G" coverage later this year, the company said,
confirming previously announced plans.
The cellular carrier, the nation's fourth largest,
has lagged behind its larger rivals in introducing "3G" wireless broadband
because it has until recently had access to less radio spectrum. Instead, it has
emphasized phones that complement slower cellular data services with Wi-Fi.
Web browsing and downloading content like ring tones
will be twice as fast with 3G on four phone models that T-Mobile USA started
selling last year, Nokia's 3555 and 6263 and Samsung's t819 and t639.
T-Mobile will offer phones that take full advantage
of the 3G network, with data speeds that are four times as fast as current
non-3G models, later this year. Those will use HSDPA, or High-Speed Downlink
Packet Access, a flavor of 3G already introduced by AT&T that allows
download speeds around 600 kilobits per second, comparable to low-end DSL
connections.
While BlackBerry smart phones are an important part
of T-Mobile's lineup, models with HSDPA likely won't be available until next
year, said Neville Ray, senior vice president of engineering and operations at
T-Mobile USA. T-Mobile USA has 28.7 million subscribers and is a subsidiary of
Deutsche Telekom AG of Germany.
T-Mobile's network isn't compatible with current
HSDPA phones sold by AT&T or imported from overseas, because T-Mobile uses a
different slice of the airwaves for its 3G service.
It bought licenses to that spectrum in a 2006
government auction, but parts of it have been used by defense and law
enforcement, and it's taken time for them to vacate the airwaves.
"It's been a tough road, but they've been very
cooperative in recent months," said Ray. The speed of the rollout of 3G to other
cities is now more dependent on how fast the company can get new equipment up
and running, he added.
(Agencies)