T-Mobile doubles 4G HSPA+ speeds in 56 new markets

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T-Mobile on Wednesday announced that it has doubled the theoretical download speed ceiling on its 4G HSPA+ network in 56 new markets. “America’s Largest 4G Network is now faster than ever and continues to deliver a fast and reliable broadband experience in more places than any other carrier,” said T-Mobile CTO Neville Ray in a statement. “Video streaming on T-Mobile’s network has more than tripled over the last year, and consumer demand for access to rich mobile content from anywhere continues to grow. T-Mobile is now supplying more than 170 million Americans with lightning-fast HSPA+ 42 speeds to feed that explosive demand.” For the time being, T-Mobile offers just one device capable of making full use of its new HSPA+ 42 service: the T-Mobile Rocket 3.0 laptop stick. The carrier has confirmed that it will launch its first HSPA+ 42-capable smartphone later this year, but it has provided no additional details or timeline. T-Mobile’s full press release follows below and it includes a list of each newly upgraded 4G market.

T-Mobile’s Faster 4G Network Now Available in More Locations

America’s Largest 4G Network is now twice as fast in more than 150 markets, available to more than 170 million Americans

BELLEVUE, Wash. — July 13, 2011 — Today, T-Mobile USA, Inc. announced that the company is doubling the speed of its 4G network in 56 additional markets, to reach more than 170 million people in 152 markets. T-Mobile customers now have access to T-Mobile’s faster 4G network in markets including Baltimore; Boston; Charlotte, N.C.; Hartford and New Haven, Conn.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Lancaster, Pa.; Minneapolis, Minn.; Providence, R.I.; and Washington, D.C., among several others. For a full list of new markets where T-Mobile’s HSPA+ 42 4G network is available, see below.

In addition to T-Mobile customers experiencing speeds twice as fast as T-Mobile’s current 4G network on compatible devices, customers also will enjoy increased network capacity and reliability. Offering a compelling 4G experience across a broad lineup of devices, America’s Largest 4G Network allows customers to stay connected in new and innovative ways in more places than ever before. From downloading files to streaming video or surfing the latest social networking sites, T-Mobile’s faster network provides a richer-than-ever mobile data experience, with anytime high-speed access to the data and information customers need and desire.

“America’s Largest 4G Network is now faster than ever and continues to deliver a fast and reliable broadband experience in more places than any other carrier,” said Neville Ray, chief technology officer, T-Mobile USA. “Video streaming on T-Mobile’s network has more than tripled over the last year, and consumer demand for access to rich mobile content from anywhere continues to grow. T-Mobile is now supplying more than 170 million Americans with lightning-fast HSPA+ 42 speeds to feed that explosive demand.”

T-Mobile’s portfolio of 4G products gives customers ultra-fast access to the content they want at home or on the go. The company recently introduced the T-Mobile Rocket 3.0 laptop stick, its first HSPA+ 42-capable device, offering average download speeds on its HSPA+ 42 network approaching 10 Mbps, with peak speeds of 27 Mbps. T-Mobile also continues to expand its 4G device lineup with innovative 4G handsets such as the new HTC Sensation 4G and the upcoming T-Mobile myTouch® 4G Slide. In the last year, T-Mobile has launched more than a dozen 4G-capable smartphones, tablets and mobile broadband products, and the company expects to launch its first HSPA+ 42 smartphone later this year.

T-Mobile 4G markets where 42Mbps service is launching today:

Allentown, Pa.; Anderson, S.C.; Asheville, N.C.; Ann Arbor, Mich.; Baltimore, Md.; Barnstable, Mass.; Bellingham, Wash.; Bloomington, Ind.; Boise, Idaho; Boston, Mass.; Bremerton, Wash.; Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Conn.; Brunswick, Ga.; Carson City, Nev.; Charlotte, N.C.; Charlottesville, Va.; Chico, Calif.; Coeur d’Alene, Idaho; Eugene, Ore.; Flagstaff, Ariz.; Flint, Mich.; Greensboro, N.C.; Greenville, S.C.; Harrisburg, Pa.; Hartford, Conn.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Knoxville, Tenn.; Lafayette, Ind.; Lancaster, Pa.; Laredo, Texas; Lynchburg, Va.; Manchester, N.H.; Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.; New Haven, Conn.; Ogden, Utah; Providence; R.I.; Provo, Utah; Raleigh-Cary, N.C.; Redding, Calif.; Reno-Sparks, Nev.; Richmond, Va.; Roanoke, Va.; Rockford, Ill.; Salem, Ore.; Scranton-Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; Spartanburg, S.C.; State College, Pa.; Tallahassee, Fla.; Terre Haute, Ind.; Tucson, Ariz.; Washington, D.C.; Wichita Falls, Texas; Winchester, Va.; Winston-Salem, N.C.; Worcester, Mass.; and York, Pa.

16 Comments
  • Snoopy07

    Could t-mobile’s new full HSPA+ smartphone be the iphone 5.  This could get interesting

    • Anonymous

      You think AT&T will allow it’s new love child to have a faster iPhone then them? Think again.

      • Anonymous

        Not Love Child…  Slave on the block. (bought for money)… it it gets stronger on it’s own dime, without the need for more money… isn’t that getting something for nothing?   ATT is probably all for it… as eventually they get all the profits anyway.

      • ct

        4g phone is based on the network speed based on the area people live…you can’t say its faster as other phones have similar if not faster/higher benchmark #’s

  • Belbarid

    *Theoretical* speed. Any word on the *actual* speed?

    • jay_max

      It varies.  I’ve gotten 9 down and 3 up on it, which I find perfectly acceptable.

  • Anonymous

    More fake 4g for more people. Awesome

    • KCRic

      Trying to run a data center from your phone or something? 42Mbps is way more than enough for a phone or laptop. Then again, you couldn’t blow Jobs hard enough for him to let you have the freedom to do that with his precious.

    • http://twitter.com/cyberb0b Bob Autrey

      I don’t really understand this whole fake 4G argument. With data caps and the current horrible battery life of LTE devices, isn’t even 10Mbps on a cell phone enough speed for 99% of the users? Even on AT&T’s horrid 3G network, I’m able to stream Slacker, Netflix, Hulu Plus, etc. with few issues. Not to mention how little actual speed is required for sending most emails even with attachments. I’m not narrow minded enough to say that there aren’t people who would need this kind of speed. Just that the vast majority don’t and would benefit much more by the carriers providing better voice and data service across the board. 

      I think all of this 100Mbps dream LTE/4G network stuff is great in theory, but when it comes down to it, data caps will keep you from using it as a primary internet connection; and hardware limitations like poor battery life really negate the need for this kind of speed. 

      Personally, I’d just like to see MAJOR improvements in the quality and coverage of the voice service of all carriers, then provide us with at least an 8-10Mbps CONSISTENT data speed across the board. Once we have that in place, then they could worry about frosting the cake with with the insane data speeds.

  • Anonymous

    What good is the speed if you’re going to be throttled???

    Friend used his to download/stream 720p/1080p youtube vids and such. After a couple of weeks, that fast 9Mb connection went to like 1Mb via speed testing and he was back to the normal streams

    • guidimusmaximus

      If you are a bandwidth hog, move to Sprint and put them out of business!

    • Postasguest

      Fake comment.  Throttled is more like 60 Kbps not 1 Mbps.  

      T-Mobile does allow their users to subscribe to a higher data plan for the rest of the billing cycle if they need it.  

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_HDQC5C4RRBPDXJZCCE4KYIFL34 Leonard Molina

    I paid $32.67 for a XBOX 360 and my mom got a 17 inch Toshiba laptop for $94.83 being delivered to our house tomorrow by FedEX. I will never again pay expensive retail prices at stores. I even sold a 46 inch HDTV to my boss for $650 and it only cost me $52.78 to get. Here is the website we using to get all this stuff, LiveCent.com

  • S K

    still waiting for tmobile 3g here in illinois, fuck you tmobile

  • zps

    too bad they can’t get the G2x to work properly.

  • Anonymous

    Nice, double the speed, now thats what I am talking about.

    http://www.Privacy-Net.tk

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