Broad Soft

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, 27 November 2013

NAB, DoD Agreement Clears Way for Auction of 50 MHz of Mobile Spectrum

Posted on 16:24 by Unknown
The National Association of Broadcasters and the Pentagon have come to an agreement which will enable the Federal Communications Commission to free up the 1755 MHz 1780 MHz band as part of the planned auction of former TV broadcast spectrum, the most significant opportunity for U.S. mobile operators to increase their licensed spectrum capacity in many years.

The new agreement is part of an auction of spectrum in the 2155-to-2180 megahertz band, collectively referred to as AWS-3 (advanced wireless services), and will allow mobile service providers to bid on 50 MHz of spectrum.

The government technology and spectrum body, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, sent a letter to the FCC detailing the deal, under which the DoD has agreed to move its operations out of the 1755 MHz to 1780 MHz band to the 2025 MHz to 2110 MHz band.

That move is enabled by a spectrum sharing pact with the broadcasters, which currently use the 2025 MHz to 2110 MHz band for remote news gathering.

The importance of the deal extends beyond the matter of freeing up about 50 MHz of spectrum for mobile communications.

The move reflects a broader embrace of more-flexible approaches to spectrum allocation. Though this auction affects only spectrum in the United States, the notion of sharing formerly allocated government spectrum for commercial purposes will be noted internationally, and likely will spur similar efforts elsewhere.

In principle, that could mean many new blocks of spectrum could be made available in many other markets, vastly expanding the amount of spectrum Internet and communications service providers can use.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Seattle's Gigabit Squared Fails: Sustainability Remains an Issue for Muni Access Networks
    Seattle's Gigabit Squared  network appears to have failed, illustrating a recurring problem with all municipal or joint venture Internet...
  • Access Networks Increasingly are All About Video
    In North America, r eal-time entertainment is responsible for over  68 percent of downstream bytes during peak periods, compared to 65 perce...
  • Using a Drone-Mounted Camera to See what a Surfer Sees "In the Water"
    If you've ever seen a picture of a surfer (the ocean kind), shot from shore, you have one view of what's going on, but you can't...
  • New Report Confirms: Investment or Competition is a Real Issue for Access Networks
    The latest Ofcom report on U.K. broadband infrastructure illustrates the inherent tension between promoting investment in next generation ne...
  • Google Fiber in Provo Prices Same as Kansas City
    Google Fiber  in Provo, Utah will be priced the same way as Google Fiber in Kansas City. People will be able to sign up for free 5 Mbps down...
  • EC to Review Telefonica, E-Plus Merger: How Many Carriers are Needed in Germany?
    European Union antitrust regulators will examine deals such as the proposal by Telefonica and Royal KPN to combine their German assets, base...
  • AT&T Tower Sale Raises, Does Not Answer, Question of "Core Competency"
    What is AT&T’s “core competency?” That is a question observers might raise, in the wake of AT&T’s decision to sell its U.S. mobile t...
  • How Big a Phone Will You Carry All the Time?
    How big a device will you carry with you, all the time, like you carry a mobile phone? Samsung Mega is going to provide some real-world tes...
  • To Attack U.S. Mobile Pricing Structure, Sprint and T-Mobile US Will Have to AddressTheir Own Cost Structures
    If a mobile service provider wants to attack prevailing retail prices in a serious way, it also has to attack its own operating and possibly...
  • Market Disruption is a Game Verizon Can Play as Well
    One often tends to think that big market disruptions are caused by small, upstart firms. History might suggest something quite different. Y...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (23)
    • ►  January (23)
  • ▼  2013 (476)
    • ►  December (83)
    • ▼  November (79)
      • Big Telecom Merger Wave Coming, Between 2014 and 2...
      • Telecom Malaysia Revenue Grows, Fixed Broadband Helps
      • U.K. Looks for 650 MHz More Wi-Fi and Mobile Spectrum
      • Above-Average Economic Growth in "Developing" Regi...
      • How Widely Could Small Cells Substitute for Fiber ...
      • NAB, DoD Agreement Clears Way for Auction of 50 MH...
      • Fixed Network Revenue Already Walks on Two Legs: W...
      • Tablets Top Long Forrm Viewing on Connected Devices
      • Global Telecom Revenue Will Grow 2.7% Annually, Th...
      • Carrier Voice and Messaging: Should Service Provid...
      • How Long Until "Peak Text Messaging Revenue?"
      • Wi-Fi is Primary Way to Connect to Internet in 16 ...
      • Maybe OTT Messaging Hasn't Visibily Cannibalized M...
      • Does Bundling Still Work?
      • Verizon "Spot Deploys" Fiber to Home to Drive Main...
      • Smart Phone Shipments Will Be 82% of All Handset S...
      • How Will Service Providers Find Investment Capital...
      • What is the Economic Contribution of "Free" Servic...
      • Will Most ISPs Eventually Offer Free 5 Mbps Service?
      • Video Mergers Might Challenge FCC Horizontal Conce...
      • Africa Broadband Adoption Low, but Poised for Big ...
      • Will FCC Formally Modify its Historic Cable TV Ind...
      • APT 700 Creates World Band for LTE
      • LTE in Unlicensed Spectrum?
      • "Europe Falling Behind" is Temporary, as was "U.S....
      • Google Builds First "Middle Mile" Network
      • Is Privacy an Anomaly on Social Networks?
      • Will 90% of Mobile Traffic Be Terminated on Wi-Fi?
      • Czech 4G Auction Fails to Bring New Competition
      • Will Amazon Web Services Be Worth $76 Billion in 2...
      • Mobile-Accessed Sites More Important in Some Indus...
      • Stockholm, London, Singapore are Global "Most Conn...
      • At Some Point, Legacy Networks are Too Expensive t...
      • TV White Spaces Business Model an Issue for CIO Group
      • Apple Average Selling Price More than Double the A...
      • FCC and CTIA Largely In Agreement About Device Unl...
      • Cloud Computing Business Worth $188 Billion by 2022?
      • No Surprise: Owners of Internet-Connected TVs Like...
      • Nobody Makes Profits Selling Smart Phones, Save Ap...
      • B2B Brand Messaging Misfires With Buyers, McKinsey...
      • European Mobile Network Investment Has Fallen 67%
      • Sprint Needs Lower Frequeny Spectrum More than a M...
      • Amazon Web Services Bigger than All the Rest of Am...
      • SoftBank, Bell Mobility Join Global M2M Association
      • "No Killer App" is a Key Service Provider Challeng...
      • Will Fourth Wave Telco Services Be Big Enough to O...
      • U.S. Telcos Have Lost 62% of Voice Lines
      • T-Mobile US to Sell $2 Billion in New Shares to Bu...
      • Will Fixed Network Revenues Grow as Mobile Revenue...
      • Is European Mobile Revenue Slide Near a Turning Po...
      • Apple TV: Content, Sales Volume, Uniqueness are Ke...
      • Some Prepaid Service Providers Face Cost Reduction...
      • Mobile Data Demand will Grow an order of Magnitude...
      • Without Small Cells, Video Conferencing and Stream...
      • Larger, Curved, More Sensitive Screens for iPhone?
      • Mobile Broadband Grows Between 27% and 82% Annually
      • Fixed Network Broadband Costs Have Fallen At Least...
      • Own the Desktop, Living Room, Platform or Experience?
      • Telenor Users to Get Free Wikipedia Access in Myanmar
      • Google South Africa TV White Spaces Trial Ends, No...
      • Device Preferences Shape Service Provider Opportun...
      • Inhabitants Per Household Drives Bandwidth Demand,...
      • LTE Capex Shifts to Software
      • Gigabit Connections Will Be Commonplace by 2020, R...
      • Los Angeles Wants Bidders for a New Fiber to Home ...
      • C Spire, the Mobile Company, to Build Fixed Gigabi...
      • EE Launches Beta of LTE-Advanced, Supporting 300 Mbps
      • Spanish Firm Building Private Wi-Fi Offload Networ...
      • A Business Model for Licensed Wi-Fi Spectrum? Glob...
      • Time Warner Cable in Play?
      • Android Surges to 81%b Global Market Share, and Th...
      • OECD Mobile Broadband Users Paying 4% Less for Spe...
      • AT&T to Deploy 40,000 Small Cells as Part of Move ...
      • BlackBerry Cancels Sale Process, Will Remain Indep...
      • 0.07 Percent of Startups Reach $1 Billion Valuations?
      • Tech Sector Is In A Bubble
      • Is the U.S. Ahead, Behind or at Par, in Terms of B...
      • Why is Time Warner Cable Losing Customers?
      • Patent War Erupts Again: Time to Stop It
    • ►  October (127)
    • ►  September (95)
    • ►  August (92)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile