Cox to Build Its Own Cellular Network

By Stephen Lawson

Mon, October 27, 2008 — IDG News Service —

Cox Communications is building its own cellular network to eventually offer mobile voice, data and entertainment in all markets it serves across the U.S., the cable operator said Monday.

Cox is one of the nation's largest cable providers, with 6.2 million residential and commercial customers. Though it has offered fixed-line phone service since 1997, Cox does not have any mobile services today.

The company will partner with Sprint Nextel to quickly launch a 3G (third-generation) service next year, but it is also building out its own network for launch next year in some of the markets it serves, said Cox spokesman David Grabert. Overall, four markets will go live next year, he said. The company did not disclose those markets or dates for availability. The same features and services will be offered both in markets served directly by Cox and those in partnership with Sprint, Grabert said.

Cable operators are bundling services, including TV, broadband Internet, voice and mobile, to ultimately offer subscribers a one-stop shop and a single bill. They hope bundling also keeps customers more loyal.

By building a mobile network of its own, Cox is committing itself to an expensive and complex project that its rivals have left to partners already in the cellular business. Comcast, Time-Warner Cable and Bright House Networks have joined with Sprint and Clearwire to help build out a national WiMax 4G (fourth-generation) mobile broadband network and plan to offer services on it.

Cox said it is building its own infrastructure so it can control the whole operation, including marketing, sales, back-office operations, customer support and billing. This will help the company maintain its strengths of network reliability and good customer service, according to Grabert.

"We've learned that the best thing for us is to manage services holistically," Grabert said.

Among other things, the service will let Cox subscribers use their mobile phones to program their DVRs (digital video recorders), watch TV programs and access content stored on their home PCs, the company said.

The network initially will be based on CDMA (Code-Division Multiple Access), which is also used by Sprint, but Cox will also test LTE (Long-Term Evolution), the 4G technology growing out of GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications), for possible future use. Cox said it has already invested more than US$500 million in wireless spectrum licenses as well as infrastructure and people to build its own network.

Cox serves customers in 28 major markets across the U.S., including Phoenix, New Orleans, central Florida, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Las Vegas, according to a service map provided by the company. It plans eventually to build out its own mobile network to cover all those markets. The company will make roaming deals to ensure that its subscribers have mobile service across other parts of the country, but it has not yet disclosed whether Sprint will be that roaming partner, Grabert said.

Loading...
Network MarketSpace
White Papers
The Challenge of a Demanding Network Infrastructure
Today's data centers are expanding as demand for data and storage continues to grow exponentially. Learn more »
Reduce Infrastructure and Administrative Costs
The Brocade® FastIron® CX Series of switches provides new levels of performance. Learn more »
A New Generation of Application Delivery Controllers (ADCs)
Learn more about Brocade® ServerIron® intelligent application delivery and traffic management solutions. Learn more »
Want to Offer a Superior User Experience?
Control a "boundary-less" enterprise with scalable solutions. Learn more »
Realize Potential Without Increasing Your Risk
Combining Brocade's high-performance infrastructure and McAfee's Web gateway solution ensures trusted environments. Learn more »
Brocade and Imperva: Providing Best-of-Breed Products
Web applications have become the backbone of business in nearly every segment of the economy. Learn more »
 
SPONSORED LINKS
 

Maximizing the Business Value of the PC Infrastructure

Enterprise PBX Comparison Guide

Getting Value from Outdated Networking Equipment

Seven Ways ITIL Can Help You in an Economic Downturn

Data Loss Prevention: A Better Way to Approach Security

Learn how to managing client systems in the enterprise.

Cloud Computing: Read about VMware's compelling vision & set of products

Top-line Performance that's Bottom-line Efficient

Accenture: Outsourcing for uncertain times. Click to learn more.

White Paper: 8 Key Ingredients to Building an Internal Cloud

Read about virtualization and consolidation effort best practices

Building the Virtualized Enterprise with VMware Infrastructure

Top 10 Business and IT Drivers for the Wealth Management Sector

Bottom-Line Benefits of Virtualization

White Paper: The Building Blocks for Cloud Computing

Oracle's Application Grid Technical Demo

Next-Generation Application Servers and Infrastructure

Application Infrastructure at Enterprise Organizations

Achieving Business Agility with Application Grid

Learn about The Information Technology Infrastructure Library.

Achieving Pervasive Performance Management

Automating the Generation and Secure Distribution of Excel Reports

Reduce risk, gain agility. See how Progress can help your business.

Improve ROI, lower TCO and reduce energy consumption.

Introducing the new HP ProLiant G6 server family

Enterprise PBX Buyer's Guide

Secondary Market Primer: Your Network at Half Price

Taking the Service Desk to the Next Level

Why Data Loss is Increasing--and What You Can Do About It

Communications and Collaboration Needs at Business Organizations

Using Open Source to Deploy Web Applications

Mid-Sized Company CIO Community: infoBOOM!

Accenture IT Consulting: Logical meets technological. More . . .

Stop Application Fraud at the Source with Device Reputation

Learn about the VMware vSphere (TM) & Intel (R) Xeon (R) Processor 5500 Series

Learn how a virtualized enterprise can help your company reduce costs

Why Isn't Server Virtualization Saving Us More?

8 Key Ingredients to Building an Internal Cloud

Data Center Optimization: Three Key Strategies

A CIO Executive Guide: Cloud Computing Looms Big on the Horizon

Oracle WebLogic Server Technical Demo

Data Grids and Service-Oriented Architecture

Achieving the Impossible: Unlimited Application Scalability

A Middleware Foundation for Application Grid

Tips for successful virtualization management.

Smart Decisions: The Role of Key Performance Indicators

Gartner Shares Predictions for 2009

64-page prescriptive guide to security, compliance, and IT operations.

Get Google Enterprise Search for your business information.

Accenture IT Consulting: Enabling high performance. More...

 
 
RESOURCE CENTER