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Saturday, March 20, 2010
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Sprint pathetically renames WiMAX into 4G to keep interest



What are you going to do to stop the negative spin about your company? Receipt is always the same: take the old lamp and sell it as new one. Nvidia decided to make pure marketing mess out of its renaming policy, and it looks like Sprint decided to follow suit.

The company released a press release claiming that they are going to expand their 4G network to include 10 cities in 2009. However, there is just one small problem - Sprint does not have a 4G network! Just for the record, at the time of writing (March 27th, 2009 at 13:08 CET), there is no such thing as a 4G network. Fastest available cellular networks in the whole world tick at 3.5G or as a WiMAX network.

An Inconvenient Truth worse than Al Gore's documentary...misleading customers is legally approved policy in the US.

An Inconvenient Truth worse than Al Gore's documentary...potentially misleading customers is legally approved policy in the US.

Sprint decided to rename WiMAX, fledging Wireless standard into 4G and claim that 4G speeds are 12 Mbps down, and that it represents "turbo-charged mobile broadband". Unfortunately for the company, 4G is a GSM-based standard being developed under the name LTE [Long Term Evolution]. 4G is a standard that will finally unify GSM and CDMA-based networks into a single one, so you should see devices such as Blackberry or iPhone being offered by both AT&T and Verizon, Sprint's largest competitors. Your 4G handheld device will also work in Japan and Korea with no issues.

Unfortunately, there is no legal way to forbid companies to use the names in bad faith. Just like 3G, 4G is an open name for a set of technologies being developed by Ericsson, Huawei, Nokia Siemens, Philips and many other players. It is sad to see companies like Sprint to use pathetic moves like this.

While we won't go into the quality and potential of WiMAX networking standard, saying that a 12Mbps network is 4G is nothing else but misleading its customers.

Just for the record, 4G LTE is defined at 100 Mbps download and 50 Mbps upload. NOT 12 Mbps, as this is speed achievable by 3.5G standards such as HSDPA. Actually, HSDPA is 14.4 Mbps, thus faster than alleged "4G" service by Sprint. In Croatia, where this author currently resides, HSDPA is available in large cities from both VIPnet, a partner of Vodafone and T-Mobile, subsidiary of T-Com. Using a two-year old Nokia N93i, we can surf at speeds exceeding Sprint's "4G".



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Comments:

On Vodacom by: Anonymous on 2/25/2010
Just an aside. Whatever the price might be for bandwidth in America they get uncapped 3-3,5G (and now 4G in vegas and other areas) which is better because it adds incredible quality to the internet experience and because of the cumulative cost advantages. You can easily watch catch up tv whithout having to worry that you'll use a few gigs in a day.

I have an HSDPA Vodafone stick and a NOKIA 5800 xpress with HSDPA and i get better speeds in Cape Town than i ever have in London but in London i just had to pay £1 per day for capless access and it was much better especailly on the move with my phone.
Theres no way you can say Vodacom's prices even begin to compare especially for a high bandwidth use case.

and to Theo, please, if you're going to put articles up on the net at least do some research. this is embarrassing.
The article writer is a douche by: Anonymous on 7/28/2009
3g/4g is NOT GSM only you moron, it stands for 4th Generation. Those can either be CDMA or GSM. Wifi and Wimax are Simplified terms for the 802.x Standard. Consider WiMax better Wifi, it makes sense.

The terms "fixed WiMAX", "mobile WiMAX", "802.16d" and "802.16e" are frequently used incorrectly.[14] Correct definitions are the following:

802.16-2004 is often called 802.16d, since that was the working party that developed the standard. It is also frequently referred to as "fixed WiMAX" since it has no support for mobility.
802.16e-2005 is an amendment to 802.16-2004 and is often referred to in shortened foricm as 802.16e. It introduced support for mobility, amongst other things and is therefore also known as "mobile WiMAX".

Do your homework next time, and don't try and be pessimistic about technology, something you dont know. Try knitting.
RE: Standards... by: Theo Valich on 4/7/2009
Just one question then... Wi-Fi can be considered as 3G or 3.5G then?
I can has fact checking plz? by: General Lee D. Mented on 3/27/2009
Ugh, where to start.... first of all I'll assume the comments keeping whitespace issue is unfixed so I apologize for the ensuing mess. I'm not sure if it supports HTML spacing (br tags etc) and there's no PREVIEW button (cmon guys get this site's shit together already) so I won't test it. In fact I'll email you a dupe of this comment in case you want to fix the formatting.

Anyway as for real comment. 4G is technically "beyond 3G", so many call WiMax "4G" or a "4G technology", which lumps in 802.16e, 802.20, LTE Advanced, etc.

Sprint DOES have a 4G network, and has for a while now, it was called XOHM and launched in Baltimore in late Sept/early Oct 2008: http://www.wi-fiplanet.com/news/article.php/3775921 with hardware made by Zyxel that you could actually buy: http://74.125.93.104/search?q=cache:6ndjbQEBaFIJ:www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx%3FItem%3DN82E16825184001+zyxel+xohm+newegg&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us Hell Acer even shipped a version of the Aspire 6930G with Xohm support built in: http://www.acer.us/acer/productv.do;jsessionid=F78D2C3D034239C4A71868D568490AA0.public_a_14c?link=oln7e.redirect&changedAlts=&kcond22e.c2att101=39857&rcond80e.c2att92=447&CRC=1703255737

So, Sprint has had "4G" for a while. In May, they bought up/merged with Clearwire, which was doing a similar thing down in Texas: http://www.betanews.com/article/SprintClearwire-WiMAX-launches-with-35-billion-in-funding/1210181201 but that took a while to get FCC approval, and so didn't get finalized until about December, when it got renamed "Clear": http://www.wi-fiplanet.com/news/article.php/3789776

So, Sprint's 4G WiMax network is called Clear. It's operating in several cities with test areas popping up all over.

Oh and what 14.4Mbps HSDPA 3.5G devices have you seen? Most of the new ones are only getting to 7.2M now, and the older ones supported 3.6 or 1.8. My Samsung SGH-U800 for example, used to manage about 2.3Mbps real world on Vodacom's network in South Africa (Which incidentally charges less for prepaid bandwidth than any US carrier does for contract). You can see a Xohm based Aspire pulling > 4mbps down and 1.5 up while in a moving vehicle here: http://twitpic.com/f4uq so, REALISTICALLY, and by that I mean NOT ON SPEC SHEETS, are you getting 3.5G speeds while driving that top that? WiMax supposedly tops out at what, 35Mbps? 70? I forget what the current generation goes to.
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