IPad's Wireless Performance Tied to AT&T's Boosting Its 3G Network

AT&T boasted that it would be ready to handle demand for the iPad's wireless connectivity through use of its Wi-Fi and 3G capabilities and a $2 billion increase in network improvements in 2010.

By Matt Hamblen
Tue, February 02, 2010

Computerworld — AT&T last week boasted that it would be ready to handle demand for the iPad's wireless connectivity through use of its Wi-Fi and 3G capabilities and a $2 billion increase in network improvements in 2010.

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Yet, analysts note, it's still unclear how well AT&T will manage the iPad's most demanding applications, including streaming video, especially when they are put to use by thousands of users in congested areas.

A specific reason for concern about AT&T's iPad readiness is how fast AT&T can upgrade its 3G capabilities, which includes installing fiber-optic connections -- called backhaul -- to cell towers and sites where cellular antennas are affixed. Backhaul is a term for the network segments that connect cell sites or other remote equipment to a network core where massive switching gear routes data and calls.

AT&T acknowledged that it needs to install the fiber-optic backhaul to provide the faster wireless speeds in a specification called HSPA 7.2 (for High-Speed Packet Access). That spec, which has sometimes been called 3.5G, will bring theoretical throughput to 7.2 Mbit/sec., many times faster than existing 3G speeds. Realistically, HSPA 7.2 will be much slower, however. AT&T executives have said wireless service will be double current 3G speeds, which would put it at less than 1Mbit/sec.

"Faster 3G speeds will come as AT&T combines the new [HSPA 7.2 software] technology with enhanced cell site backhaul connections over the course of 2010 and 2011," an AT&T spokeswoman said in an e-mail to Computerworld .

The AT&T statement clarifies what many reports stated in January and last week, that AT&T had made a nationwide software upgrade to HSPA 7.2, implying that the faster speeds for the iPad were already available. In fact, the backhaul installation is also required, and that work is only in its early stages.

Just how quickly can AT&T build the backhaul connections? Initial deployments have been made in six U.S. cities -- Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles and Miami, the spokeswoman said. Some cell sites in those cities have completed the fiber backhaul upgrade and turned i on, but she didn't provide further details. In a single city, there could be thousands of cell sites.

Throughout 2010, more cities will be added to the list of those getting backhaul upgrades, the AT&T spokeswoman said. "We anticipate the majority of our mobile data traffic will be carried over the expanded fiber-based HSPA-capable backhaul by the end of this year, with deployment continuing to expand in 2011."

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Originally published on www.computerworld.com. Click here to read the original story.
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