Jump to content

Sprint had more successful connected calls at the Super Bowl.


bucdenny

Recommended Posts

I'd say getting speeds of 1.15Mbps DL and 97% successful voice connections is a triumph for Sprint given it was the Super Bowl.  It would have been ZERO before Network Vision.

 

Robert

  • Like 22
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd say getting speeds of 1.15Mbps DL and 97% successful voice connections is a triumph for Sprint given it was the Super Bowl.  It would have been ZERO before Network Vision.

 

Robert

I totally agree!  The NV back haul is much of an improvement!  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Is LTE live in East Rutherford?  Either way, I'd call it a win.  Who uploads 20 MB files while watching a football game?

 

If the 1.15 Mbps is for 3G, then that's awesome!  LTE, not so much ... but then again, VZ wasn't a whole lot better.  Definitely useable, though, which is what I think what matters in a situation like this.  You want to be able to Tweet, update Facebook, upload to Instagram, etc., without problems during a huge event like the Super Bowl.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It is at events like this where Spark will shine.

 

Doubtful.  That horse is already out of the barn for basically all wireless operators at events that attract upwards of 50,000 people.  The smartphone revolution for Joe Blow caught on too heavily, too quickly.

 

Look at it this way.  One Sprint Spark 20 MHz TDD LTE carrier has similar capacity to one bog standard 20 MHz 802.11n Wi-Fi carrier.  A big wireless operator at, say, the Super Bowl might be able to divide loading among roughly 5-10 sectors using stadium DAS, existing macro sites, and temporary COWs.  Meanwhile, stadium Wi-Fi could divide loading across 100 or so access points.

 

No contest.  Wi-Fi is the way of the future at major sporting events.  The powers that be have to improve free and easy connectivity or continue to lose audience to TV.

 

AJ

  • Like 5
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Doubtful.  That horse is already out of the barn for basically all wireless operators at events that attract upwards of 50,000 people.  The smartphone revolution for Joe Blow caught on too heavily, too quickly.

 

Look at it this way.  One Sprint Spark 20 MHz TDD LTE carrier has similar capacity to one bog standard 20 MHz 802.11n Wi-Fi carrier.  A big wireless operator at, say, the Super Bowl might be able to divide loading among roughly 5-10 sectors using stadium DAS, existing macro sites, and temporary COWs.  Meanwhile, stadium Wi-Fi could divide loading across 100 or so access points.

 

No contest.  Wi-Fi is the way of the future at major sporting events.  The powers that be have to improve free and easy connectivity or continue to lose audience to TV.

 

AJ

You're discounting small cells. Deploying picocells across the stadium can offer similar (or better) capacity to Wi-Fi APs, and can be co-located with Wi-Fi APs, too.

 

In the case of Sprint Spark, picocells supporting a 20MHz TDD carrier would offer similar capacity to Wi-Fi, perhaps slightly better. And picocells can be sectorized as well (though it is more challenging to do).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You're discounting small cells. Deploying picocells across the stadium can offer similar (or better) capacity to Wi-Fi APs, and can be co-located with Wi-Fi APs, too.

 

In the case of Sprint Spark, picocells supporting a 20MHz TDD carrier would offer similar capacity to Wi-Fi, perhaps slightly better. And picocells can be sectorized as well (though it is more challenging to do).

As for " Small Cells" in a ultrasmall highly dense deployment such as a football stadium it would only make sense to use a "nanocell" setup which would offer 40MHz+ to extremly localized sections (i.e 30x30 feet).

-William

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You're discounting small cells. Deploying picocells across the stadium can offer similar (or better) capacity to Wi-Fi APs, and can be co-located with Wi-Fi APs, too.

 

Hmm, not really.  No, not discounting small cells.  But for data and not voice, small cells are little different from Wi-Fi access points.

 

I have to pull rank on you here, Neal.  I am going to guess that you have never been to an NFL game.  Meanwhile, in the past 20 years, I have attended over 150 NFL games in 11 different cities -- including a Super Bowl in New Orleans.  So, as a Kansas City Chiefs season ticket holder, I am quite well in tune with league initiatives.

 

The NFL is requiring teams and stadiums -- that have not yet complied -- to install uber enterprise grade Wi-Fi.  Fans want the ability to see replays on their devices and follow fantasy football.  Otherwise, many will just increasingly skip the $100 ticket, stay home, and watch in full HDTV with home broadband at their fingertips.  Traditional wireless operators cannot catch up quickly enough.  And do we really want them to?  Do we really care?

 

Mark my words, the bulk of wireless data at NFL venues will soon be over Wi-Fi.

 

AJ

  • Like 5
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hmm, not really.  No, not discounting small cells.  But for data and not voice, small cells are little different from Wi-Fi access points.

 

I have to pull rank on you here, Neal.  I am going to guess that you have never been to an NFL game.  Meanwhile, in the past 20 years, I have attended over 150 NFL games in 11 different cities -- including a Super Bowl in New Orleans.  So, as a Kansas City Chiefs season ticket holder, I am quite well in tune with league initiatives.

 

The NFL is requiring teams and stadiums -- that have not yet complied -- to install uber enterprise grade Wi-Fi.  Fans want the ability to see replays on their devices and follow fantasy football.  Otherwise, many will just increasingly skip the $100 ticket, stay home, and watch in full HDTV with home broadband at their fingertips.  Traditional wireless operators cannot catch up quickly enough.  And do we really want them to?  Do we really care?

 

Mark my words, the bulk of wireless data at NFL venues will soon be over Wi-Fi.

 

AJ

And with the large amounts of TDD spectrum you can yield an "individualized wireless" experience with a hyper dense deployment of "nanocells"  so no more than 10 rows of the stadium share the same access point.  He who has FTTP wins!

-William

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow, AJ is an NFL season ticket holder. I Didn't realize he had that kind of cheddar to throw around.

 

Well, I have demonstrated plenty of "cheddar to throw around" at the likes of wireless service plans, handsets, spectrum analyzers, and research trips.  But I also work in lowly academia.  I am certainly not yet the "big cheese" in this family.  That would be my father.  He and I do not see eye to eye on many matters of business, politics, religion -- NFL, though, is our common ground.  So, I have been a stakeholder in our season tickets for about two decades.  And that has been a good relationship.

 

AJ

  • Like 9
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, I have demonstrated plenty of "cheddar to throw around" at the likes of wireless service plans, handsets, spectrum analyzers, and research trips.  But I also work in lowly academia.  I am certainly not yet the "big cheese" in this family.  That would be my father.  He and I do not see eye to eye on many matters of business, politics, religion -- NFL, though, is our common ground.  So, I have been a stakeholder in our season tickets for about two decades.  And that has been a good relationship.

 

AJ

Two decades of Chiefs football? I didn't know you were a masochistic, too!   :P  

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Two decades of Chiefs football? I didn't know you were a masochistic, too!   :P  

 

If you think that the 1990s and 2000s were bad for Chiefs football, I might have to be historian and pull rank on you, too.

 

;)

 

AJ

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, I have demonstrated plenty of "cheddar to throw around" at the likes of wireless service plans, handsets, spectrum analyzers, and research trips.  But I also work in lowly academia.  I am certainly not yet the "big cheese" in this family.  That would be my father.  He and I do not see eye to eye on many matters of business, politics, religion -- NFL, though, is our common ground.  So, I have been a stakeholder in our season tickets for about two decades.  And that has been a good relationship.

 

AJ

 

That's the best use of NFL season tickets I could imagine.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Verizon users pulled 2tb and AT&T users pulled 630gb? So much for "97% of cellular users use less than 2gb per month." Imagine the overage charges inside that stadium.

Hang on, let's math it. Round up to 3 Terabytes of usage across the whole stadium. That's 3,000,000 Megabytes. 3,000,000 / 50,000 = 60. Yes, that's an average of sixty meg per person.

 

60 MB * 30 days = 1800 MB/Month. 1.8 Gig. Less than the 2GB average quoted, but honestly quite close.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hang on, let's math it. Round up to 3 Terabytes of usage across the whole stadium. That's 3,000,000 Megabytes. 3,000,000 / 50,000 = 60. Yes, that's an average of sixty meg per person.

 

60 MB * 30 days = 1800 MB/Month. 1.8 Gig. Less than the 2GB average quoted, but honestly quite close.

Not every person there had AT&T and verizon only. You'd need to figure the average percent of American cell phone users that have verizon and AT&T. Then you can math it. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • large.unreadcontent.png.6ef00db54e758d06

  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • Posts

    • Fury Gran Coupe (My First Car - What a Boat...)
    • Definite usage quirks in hunting down these sites with a rainbow sim in a s24 ultra. Fell into a hole yesterday so sent off to T-Mobile purgatory. Try my various techniques. No Dish. Get within binocular range of former Sprint colocation and can see Dish equipment. Try to manually set network and everybody but no Dish is listed.  Airplane mode, restart, turn on and off sim, still no Dish. Pull upto 200ft from site straight on with antenna.  Still no Dish. Get to manual network hunting again on phone, power off phone for two minutes. Finally see Dish in manual network selection and choose it. Great signal as expected. I still think the 15 minute rule might work but lack patience. (With Sprint years ago, while roaming on AT&T, the phone would check for Sprint about every fifteen minutes. So at highway speed you could get to about the third Sprint site before roaming would end). Using both cellmapper and signalcheck.net maps to hunt down these sites. Cellmapper response is almost immediate these days (was taking weeks many months ago).  Their idea of where a site can be is often many miles apart. Of course not the same dataset. Also different ideas as how to label a site, but sector details can match with enough data (mimo makes this hard with its many sectors). Dish was using county spacing in a flat suburban area, but is now denser in a hilly richer suburban area.  Likely density of customers makes no difference as a poorer urban area with likely more Dish customers still has country spacing of sites.
    • Mike if you need more Dish data, I have been hunting down sites in western Columbus.  So far just n70 and n71 reporting although I CA all three.
    • Good catch! I meant 115932/119932. Edited my original post I've noticed the same thing lately and have just assumed that they're skipping it now because they're finally able to deploy mmWave small cells.
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...