Jump to content

Marcelo Claure, Town Hall Meetings, New Family Share Pack Plan, Unlimited Individual Plan, Discussion Thread


joshuam

Recommended Posts

I gave you a first hand experience (and one of the reasons I wouldn't want a 70 ft. tall wooden pole in front of my yard) yet you still dismiss it.

 

Some people are just to dense.

Tell you what, the day I complain of slow speeds after I stop Sprint/Mobilite from sticking a 70 ft. pole in front of my yard, then that's the day you can say the above. But as of right now, I don't believe anyone has fought a small cell and complained publicly about speeds afterwards. If you can find that person, them bring him/her forward and you can bash them all you want. Most smart homeowners will know the consequences of fighting small cells or requiring powerlines to be put underground (longer outages if something goes wrong). People have been dealing with their decisions. Unfortunately, you can't seem to accept that.

 

I made it clear that I have absolutely no problem with Sprint using existing ~40 foot telephone poles in my area. I just don't want a 70 ft. wood mast sticking out like a sore thumb.

Guy, you little story isn't proof that a 70 cell tower reduces property value. It isn't even evidence because a car port isn't a cell tower,neither is it a generalizable in any way.

 

And if you stop a wireless provider from putting in infrastructure and don't complain about sucky reception or slow speeds that is really all I am asking for. But if putting in that 70 foot tower isn't going to help anyone, as you imply, I don't know why a company would spend the money to put it in.

 

Last, carriers don't build there network based out what you find acceptable. If what you find acceptable and the infrastructure they plan to put in can earn a return that covers the cost then great. If not then people have to decide but if lived in you neighborhood i would do everything I could to allow carriers to improve their service.

 

Sent from my LGLS992 using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Who needs utility poles! Flimflam!

 

Back in my day, we didn't have electricity, telephone, and cable television on these poles. We had oil lamps for light. For entertainment, you'd stare at the lamp until your eyes burned. If you wanted to talk to someone somewhere, you'd yell at the top of your lungs. Maybe they would hear you, maybe they wouldn't.

 

And we liked it!

 

AJ

  • Like 18
Link to comment
Share on other sites

*looks at neighborhoods with all underground utilities...*

 

Spend some time in NYC and you'll see how everything is underground and internet services go out daily because people cut the wrong cables.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Spend some time in NYC and you'll see how everything is underground and internet services go out daily because people cut the wrong cables.

My neighborhood is in this situation right now because Verizon messed something up while installing FiOS. Now Optimum internet has been in and out for the past 3 weeks.

 

Sent from my Nexus 6 using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not to continue this conversation (with passive aggressive personal jabs), but I did find this on the Googlez:

http://realtormag.realtor.org/daily-news/2014/07/25/cell-towers-antennas-problematic-for-buyers

 

Realtor Field Guide:

http://www.realtor.org/field-guides/field-guide-to-cell-phone-towers

 

Personally, I don't really care because a house will appreciate at about the same rate as its neighbors. I am a little disheartened because I thought the whole point of NGN was to use existing right of way infrastructure to rapidly get equipment installed.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not to continue this conversation (with passive aggressive personal jabs), but I did find this on the Googlez:

http://realtormag.realtor.org/daily-news/2014/07/25/cell-towers-antennas-problematic-for-buyers

 

Realtor Field Guide:

http://www.realtor.org/field-guides/field-guide-to-cell-phone-towers

 

Personally, I don't really care because a house will appreciate at about the same rate as its neighbors. I am a little disheartened because I thought the whole point of NGN was to use existing right of way infrastructure to rapidly get equipment installed.

I'm sure 99% of it is doing just that however there isn't always a pole where it would be beneficial to have one. Especially is suburban areas.

 

Sent from my Nexus 6 using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guy, you little story isn't proof that a 70 cell tower reduces property value. It isn't even evidence because a car port isn't a cell tower,neither is it a generalizable in any way.

 

You really seem to have a reading problem. What does the car port have to do with the argument? I mentioned the car port to illustrate some of the top features that came with the house. It was supposed to be one of the top tier houses that probably ended up being sold on a mid tier sale price due to the utility pole standing in the backyard. People were just turned off by it since it was the only house with a utility pole.

And if you stop a wireless provider from putting in infrastructure and don't complain about sucky reception or slow speeds that is really all I am asking for.

Are you dyslexic? How many times do I have to repeat myself? It's getting ridiculous.

 

But if putting in that 70 foot tower isn't going to help anyone, as you imply, I don't know why a company would spend the money to put it in.

 

Never mind. You definitely have a reading problem. :Facepalm:

 

Never said it wouldn't help anyone. I just said it wouldn't help ME.

Last, carriers don't build there network based out what you find acceptable.

Actually, they do. Certain communities have certain rules about what residents can and cannot build. There's a reason why no businesses can have tall signs in Katy, TX's Cinco Ranch community. Exxon, McDonalds, Wells Fargo, and even the schools have to have their signs on ground level and not in poles. Rules are rules, and nobody is exempt.

 

If what you find acceptable and the infrastructure they plan to put in can earn a return that covers the cost then great. If not then people have to decide but if lived in you neighborhood i would do everything I could to allow carriers to improve their service.

 

Cool beans. You do as you please. Heck, I think Sprint and some tower operators had a way for land owners to submit their property as potential candidates for future towers. Why not start there instead of waiting?
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

My neighborhood is in this situation right now because Verizon messed something up while installing FiOS. Now Optimum internet has been in and out for the past 3 weeks.

 

Sent from my Nexus 6 using Tapatalk

Both have its upsides and downsides.

 

Where I live, powerlines run on poles. Theres an upside and downside to that. If power or Internet ever goes out, it is fixed quick. But because our utilities are exposed to the elements (especially late Spring rain), we have more frequent outages, especially during the months of April, May, and June.

 

Suburban Houston on the other hand has to deal with less outages during torrential thunderstorms. But when they do have outages, it can take up to a few days to fix.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Aesthetics arguments aside, doesn't a 70ft pole kind of defeat the purpose of a "small cell?" For most areas, I don't see any reason to use anything other than the cells like what AJ posted, or what we have seen pictures from the Los Angeles area. Have any of the 70ft poles been approved, and where exactly are they attempting to install them?

 

Heck... a 70ft pole would be taller than 90% of the cell sites Sprint uses in my hometown (Springfield, MO). I'll link to a picture of one: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/27292144/Towers/2013-01-05%2016.47.40.jpg

(this site has NV/B41 gear on it now - tri-band - I just don't have a picture showing the whole tower with the new gear, just close ups).

Yeah, there comes a point where I'd be worried about the small cell covering more people than the serving macro sector at that height. Here in the hilly suburbs where I'm at most of the Sprint macro installs sit right around 90 feet AGL (usually on the lowest lease level with the other three between 100 and 150 feet <_<) and an oddly placed small cell at that height could easily end up covering just as many or more people as a macro sector if it's on a hilltop above a recently developed area with no nearby macro.

 

And my understanding is these are just outputting a single B41 carrier compared to the 3+ a macro sector would be outputting. (2xCA; See nexgencpu's post below) Thus I doubt 70ft poles will be common.

 

Edit: and with ODAS/traditional small cells it's just one or two band 25 carriers coming out of an omni so that would make even less sense. But I don't think we've ever seen a "traditional" small cell anywhere near that tall.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And my understanding is these are just outputting a single B41 carrier compared to the 3+ a macro sector would be outputting. Thus I doubt 70ft poles will be common.

Actually these small cells can do 2xCA, RF engineer posted hitting over 160mbs on one.

 

Also if they are using microwave or B41 backhaul it would help pickup signal from host site.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Actually these small cells can do 2xCA, RF engineer posted hitting over 160mbs on one.

 

Also if they are using microwave or B41 backhaul it would help pickup signal from host site.

Oh. That's awesome. Didn't know that. Post edited.  :thx:

 

But my point still stands. One omni sector with two B41 carriers at the same height as a three-sector macro with 3+ B41 carriers per sector doesn't make a lot of sense.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This Kansas City Star Article by Mark Davis has an important section here:

 

 

Chicago has long been an important market for Sprint. It is where the company developed the model for its decentralized management approach called One Sprint that it uses across the nation.

 

Dave Tovar, Sprint spokesman, said Chicago was first to have its own market president with responsibility for marketing, sales, network, or essentially everything. He said the RootMetrics ranking reflects the network benefit of that local focus and that Sprint is starting to see that in other markets. Chicago simply got a year’s head start, he said.

 

I'm still a believer.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just caught up on all these forum pages...

"Why does Sprint need a ugly tall 70 foot poll?? Doesn't that eliminate the point of small cells!!!"

...

 

Have ALL of you forgotten that it's LTE UE Relay, that MOST sites will be receiving backhaul via band 41???

The height gives it the advantage of having a LoS signal so that we all get service. Sprint can't afford to run fiber to every small cell, so they're using UE Relay because it's more economical and faster to get up and running.

Also, who gives a hoot about the height! No one in their right mind is starring at the sky, we have cars to drive and phones to stare at.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sprint has just overhauled its BYOD Program. You can now order a SIM Kit for free from Sprint. It's actually a 3 in 1 universal SIM card that is designed to fit in any of the eligible devices.

 

The BYOD-eligible device list has grown as well to include more devices.

  • Like 11
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sprint has just overhauled its BYOD Program. You can now order a SIM Kit for free from Sprint. It's actually a 3 in 1 universal SIM card that is designed to fit in any of the eligible devices.

 

The BYOD-eligible device list has grown as well to include more devices.

It's about time they get with the times (sort of)! Though I keep reading language on that page about having it "installed" at a sprint store ie activate there. If that's the only way they'll have one activate a BYOD device is by going to the store then there's no way I'll consider this. I also don't understand why they can't make things more DIY friendly. I despise having to interact with customer service for such simple things. And it would also be nice if you could activate this on prepaid!

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's about time they get with the times (sort of)! Though I keep reading language on that page about having it "installed" at a sprint store ie activate there. If that's the only way they'll have one activate a BYOD device is by going to the store then there's no way I'll consider this. I also don't understand why they can't make things more DIY friendly. I despise having to interact with customer service for such simple things. And it would also be nice if you could activate this on prepaid!

 

Perhaps it's necessary to verify the IMEI to ensure the device isn't lost/stolen/blacklisted in person?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

*looks at neighborhoods with all underground utilities...*

 

Underground utilities or not, neighborhoods still need streetlights.  I can post a photo of a local small cell mounted on the side of and an omni antenna on the top of a streetlight -- or maybe it is a traffic signal.  Either way, neighborhoods have those.  Now, unless this small cell is not yet active, it does not seem to be a Sprint small cell, not AT&T nor T-Mobile, for that matter.  I think it is VZW, though I would have to get it on my spectrum analyzer to know for certain

 

AJ

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Perhaps it's necessary to verify the IMEI to ensure the device isn't lost/stolen/blacklisted in person?

I don't see why that would be necessary in person. The others don't have a problem doing BYOD online. My concern is that as soon as I stepped into a store they would be completely clueless about BYOD, tell me that sprint doesn't do that and then try to sell me a brand new phone. I have zero faith in their retail stores after what I've encountered in them.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't see why that would be necessary in person. The others don't have a problem doing BYOD online. My concern is that as soon as I stepped into a store they would be completely clueless about BYOD, tell me that sprint doesn't do that and then try to sell me a brand new phone. I have zero faith in their retail stores after what I've encountered in them.

 

Perhaps it's about getting you into the retail store where you see a new and shiny (and fully network compatible) Sprint device that you can take home that day instead of BYOD.... and get a trade-in credit for your current device... so the goal is to get you in there for that?

 

Improving the sales experience is critical when doing this... but I guess that's the reason for it.

 

Don't forget the accessory sales!  :)

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Perhaps it's about getting you into the retail store where you see a new and shiny (and fully network compatible) Sprint device that you can take home that day instead of BYOD.... and get a trade-in credit for your current device... so the goal is to get you in there for that?

 

Improving the sales experience is critical when doing this... but I guess that's the reason for it.

 

Don't forget the accessory sales! :)

Yeah exactly why I won't go to a store!

  • Like 4
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

    • I've now seen 100 MHz n77 from SoftBank and 100 MHz n78 from NTT. NTT seems to be a bit better south of Osaka, though in some cases it drops down to B19 LTE as some areas around here are pretty rural. SoftBank has n77 around, but it's flakey enough that I switched eSIMs earlier this morning.
    • I'm currently typing this from a bullet train headed from Tokyo to Osaka. Using a roaming eSIM rather than T-Mobile as it's a lot cheaper, but I'll start with T-Mobile's roaming experience. Since I have a business line, I can't add data packs online, so I'm just using the 256 kbps baseline service you get by default. That service runs on Softank 4G. SoftBank has a well-built-out LTE network though, with plenty of B41, falling back to B1/3/8 as needed. 5G roaming from T-Mobile doesn't appear to exist though. I've seen 20+10 MHz B41 when I've looked, generally speaking. WiFi calling works well, and voice calls over LTE work fine too (I forgot to turn WiFi back on after doing some testing, so I expect my bill to be a dollar more next month). I want to say I even got HD voice over the cell network for the VoLTE call I did. I have a bunch of eSIMs and a couple of physical SIMs to try out. I've gotten the eSIMs up and running, but last I checked the physical SIM wasn't working even after activation so I'll run through eSIMs for the moment and update this thread with pSIM info and details on not-Tokyo in the coming days. First off, there's US Mobile's complimentary East Asia eSIM (5GB) that I grabbed before my unlimited plan Stateside expired. That SIM uses SIM Club, routing through Singapore, running on SoftBank LTE and 5G. I've seen 40 MHz n77, as well as 10x10 n28, and have seen download speeds in excess of 200 Mbps with uploads of more than 50 Mbps, though typical speeds are slower. Routing is via Equinix/Packet.net. 5G coverage is rather spotty, but LTE is plenty fast enough; either my phone doesn't want to use the 5G band combos that have more coverage or 5G coverage is just spottier here than in the US (at least on T-Mibile). Latency is as low as 95ms to sites in Singapore (usually closer to 120ms), which is pretty great considering the 3300 mi between Tokyo and Singapore. Next there's Ubigi. It also routes through Singapore via Transatel (despite being owned by NTT), and sites on top of NTT docomo's network. I didn't see NTT 5G in Tokyo when I tested it, but since then I've seen 10x10 n28, and have seen B1/B3/B19 on the LTE side. So far it's not the fastest thing out there, but I'm guessing coverage will be a little better...or maybe not. This was $17 for 10GB. Latency is a bit higher to Singapore, but still under 150ms it seems. Then there's Airalo, which was the cheapest when I bought it at $9 for 10GB. It also routes through Singapore (on Singtel), but on my S24 I have my pick of KDDI (au) or SoftBank. KDDI has extensive B41 coverage and I've seen 20+20 with UL CA. While waiting for the train at HND Terminal 3 (Keikyu line) I hit 250+ Mbps down and 10+ Mbps up...over LTE...with pretty respectable latency numbers (not much above 100ms). This is in adition to supporting SoftBank, also on LTE (my S24 defaulted to KDDI, while my wife's Pixel 8 defaulted to SoftBank and didn't seem to want to connect to KDDI). Of the various carriers mentioned, I'd say this was the best pick, though prices have bumped back up to $18 for the 10GB plan...but it's probably still what I'd pick if I had to pick just one carrier. Then there's Saily, which uses Truphone out of Hong Kong. I haven't used this as much, as I only grabbed 3GB for $7. It runs on NTT but doesn't seem to have 5G access and doesn't seem to have as good speeds. Yes, Hong Kong is way closer to Japan, but latency didn't seem to be any better, at ~150ms. In all cases, I've had reception even in train tunnels and even at high speed on the bullet train, on all three carriers I've tried (I don't think I'll be able to play with a Rakuten SIM, which is rather disappointing). There have been cases where service has degraded, but it looks like you'd have reasonable cell service no matter which of the big three carriers you picked...and since T-Mobile roams on one of them, that's good enough if you're content to buy day passes.
    • https://www.phonearena.com/news/t-mobile-older-rate-plan-prices-june_id157821 We're on Sprint Max for our seven phone/two Apple Watch (with Cellular) family plan... Because it doesn't make sense to switch to anything else, especially if we can't even finance all of our devices. Some of you may recall that T-Mobile suddenly cut our credit limit to $1,500 (which is barely more than one iPhone 15 Pro) with no notice at all. I escalated it to the Office of the CEO and was told to pound sand, even though I have 800+ Credit as a longtime customer and was suddenly being treated as a deadbeat. I ultimately upgraded my three iPhone lines directly through Apple and they're Unlocked. I haven't bothered to check on whether my Credit Limit has updated, but I don't plan on upgrading them through T-Mobile again. I guess we'll find out if "Sprint Max" counts as "older" soon enough.
    • From just under a week ago: https://www.t-mobile.com/news/network/t-mobile-announces-163-million-in-completed-network-upgrades-for-arkansas Progress!
  • Recently Browsing

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