Bringing LTE to Rural America

Posted by: Joan Marsh on July 5, 2011 at 2:37 pm

Late last month, 76 Democratic Congressional Representatives urged the FCC and the Department of Justice to give important consideration to the increased broadband wireless coverage that will be made possible by AT&T’s acquisition of T-Mobile.  More specifically, the letter recognized the significant benefits of expanded LTE broadband services to 55 million Americans that might not otherwise see 4G LTE deployments in their communities.

AT&T has made clear that the scale, spectrum, and other resources generated by the transaction will permit AT&T to deploy LTE – the premier next-generation wireless broadband technology – to more than 97% of the U.S. population.  That deployment in turn will create jobs, incent investment, help bridge the digital divide and help achieve the Administration’s broadband objectives for rural America, relying entirely on private capital and without the expenditure of government funds.

Free Press has long acknowledged that high-speed broadband Internet access has become a necessity for productivity and economic growth.  Free Press also acknowledges that more than one-third of Americans still lack access to a high speed service in their home and laments that “whole regions of the country are not being served by broadband providers.”  Yet, when confronted with AT&T’s commitment to deploy LTE – a faster and more spectrally efficient wireless broadband technology – to a significant portion of all Americans now under-served, Free Press glibly accuses us of misleading members of Congress and making “phony promises.”  In support of this, Free Press points to our ongoing efforts to expand our HSPA+ deployments – apparently concluding that HSPA+ is the same as LTE.

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Sprint v. Sprint

Posted by: AT&T Blog Team on June 21, 2011 at 2:30 pm

By Wayne Watts, AT&T Senior Executive VP and General Counsel

In my 28 years as a lawyer with AT&T, I have been involved in a number of major transactions. Each has presented different issues, involved different competitive landscapes and was reviewed by different Administrations.  One constant, though, is that all of them were subjected to a thorough, fact-based review. 

I have no doubt that this will be the case again as the FCC and DOJ review the AT&T/T-Mobile transaction. It is for that reason that AT&T and T-Mobile USA have gone to great lengths to support our merger with facts. We have produced millions of pages of documents and extensively detailed pleadings supported by 19 sworn declarations.

On the other hand, final comments were filed yesterday at the FCC and merger opponents like Sprint continue to base their opposition on hyperbole, not fact. 

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Corning, Innovation and the
Power of Mobile Broadband

Posted by: AT&T Blog Team on June 17, 2011 at 1:42 pm

As most of you know, major players in the high-tech industry have filed at the FCC in support of our merger with T-Mobile.  These are some of the most innovative thinkers and investors in America, and their filings thoughtfully lay out their reasons for supporting the merger.  Few things, however, bring home the connection between innovation and mobile broadband capacity better than a recent video developed by Corning

In “A Day Made of Glass,” Corning shows not only the key role high tech glass plays in our future, but also how much these innovative products depend on the existence of robust, next generation wireless broadband networks.  From morning till night, at home, at work, and on the road, Corning sees a pretty exciting future for consumers.  Let’s hope it becomes a reality.  

Click here and take a look for yourself.

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