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Sprint deployed WiMAX (remember that?) fairly widely, lot of good that did them.

mmWave is as dead as dead. The cellular Betamax. iPhone 16e (the everyman's iPhone) doesn't support it, and neither did the SE before it.

VZW will be converting those base stations into birdhouses in 5-7 years.






If mmWave is dead as dead, why are Ofcom going ahead with their spectrum auction? https://www.mobileworldlive.com/europe/ofcom-moves-ahead-wit...

Nokia is also currently rolling out Europe’s first 5G standalone mmWave Radio Access Network in Italy. More to the point though, it could be integral in how we deal with NTN - particularly LEO D2C provisioning

https://filtronic.com/news-events/white-papers/time-to-step-...

https://mmtron.com/mmwave-leo-satellites-coming-over-the-hor...


That's sad for Apple, then. A poor decision on their part.

Examples of Android phones that often support mmWave 5G:

Samsung: Many Galaxy S and Z series models, including recent releases.

Google: Pixel phones, especially the Pro models.

OnePlus: Various 5G phones, including the 10 Pro, 10T, and Nord series.

(etc)

Apple should get their shit together.


It never worked unless you were walking on the street. Expensive too, I heard $20 per antenna. Millimeter is good for fixed antenna and delivering internet last mile to homes. Verizon bought into it millimeter while TMobile focused on mid bands, why T-Mobile is faster on average than Verizon. People use their phones indoors.

Absolutely correct on all the above.

T-Mobile is also using mmwave and retaining it in urban cores, but returning a lot of the spectrum.

There's a LOT of spectrum work being done at the FCC right now... Or was...


> OnePlus: Various 5G phones, including the 10 Pro, 10T, and Nord series.

The 9 pro was the last model they sold with mmwave. The entire 10 and 11 series don't have it. The Nord never did.

> Apple should get their shit together.

They ship mmwave on everything but their budget models?


Those Samsungs lack mmWave antennas in Europe. Not sure about Apple.

mmWave is going to be useful in places like stadiums or large arenas, though. It works wonders in these kinds of applications.

WiMAX never really worked well at all.


Stadiums are pretty much the only place where mmWave in phones makes sense. For the other 99.99% of usage, it's an expensive power-hungry extra radio that doesn't work. mmWave 5G is mostly a sunk cost for Verizon, and largely irrelevant to everyone else.

>it's an expensive power-hungry extra radio that doesn't work

Yes, it requires more power.

You have to consider power and the time the radio needs to be on to accomplish the task.

If using mmWave you can transfer data at 2,000Mbps and using midband you achieve 500Mbps the baseband will be on for 4x the time with midband, and it will need to use less than 1/4th the power of mmWave to break even.

Midband does not require 1/4th the power of mmWave. Closer to 1/2th.

On 11/27/22 at 5:13pm I was in the St. Louis airport and ran a speed test on my iPhone 12 Pro Max. I was probably one of the first non-diagnostic users of their mmWave infrastructure and I must have been the only user at the time because I achieved a damn-near-practical-maximum of 3938Mbps down. The only reason I ran the speed test at all was that a notoriously sluggish web application I was using was performing spectacularly.

Since then I have been running speed tests at concerts, sporting events, traffic jams, airports, shopping centers, and the Rennaissance Faire. All locations where, prior to 5G, cellular coverage was useless.

On 10/13/24 at 1:14pm I was in a crowded terminal at Chicago O'Hare and ran a speed test on an iPhone 15 Pro Max. Connected via mmWave I achieved 1869Mbps down.


> Stadiums are pretty much the only place where mmWave in phones makes sense.

And Airports, and Parks, and Ampitheateaters, and Malls, and Theme Parks...

mmWave isn't a general solution, sure. But mmWave is great for anywhere crowded enough to benefit from a DAS setup, and there are a lot of DAS setups around.


In any case it was a much better solution than band 46 license assisted access LTE-A/NR-U which used unlicensed 5Ghz spectrum shared with wifi. If we want to talk about vaporware/abandoned stuff, this was among the most controversial and least deployed solutions to those areas before mmwave became a thing.

Agreed. Stealing public WiFi spectrum for private LTE was always a terrible idea.

Stadiums, downtown areas, school sports, racetracks, etc.

Any place outside, in good weather, with high population density!


> WiMAX never really worked well at all

Neither did LTE (or VoLTE) work well at the start.

WiMAX didn't get the funding and backing primarily because it didn't integrate well with existing systems. Hilariously it fit the criteria as 4G before LTE did. I guess there was a strong vendor push to include LTE into 4G.


I had one of the few laptop models with WiMAX built-in, and I tried it several times. The only time it worked was on the Brighton Beach boardwalk, surprising me completely. But even then, the connection speed was lower than of my 3G USB modem.

"Cellular Betamax" would suggest someone knowingly used it, and a handful of people actually liked it and committed to it.



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