In a redacted letter posted to the FCC website, AT&T explain how a merger with T-Mobile would bring LTE to rural America. Specifically, the increased economies of scale would
allow AT&T’s upcoming LTE network to cover 97% of the American population rather than 80% of the population. That 17% difference in population is essentially most of rural America.
It is well known that the biggest obstacle to wireless (and wired) broadband deployment in rural areas is cost. Vast rural lands require huge back-haul cabling costs while low population densities make cell tower deployment cost prohibitive. With several providers competing in a region, low population densities are cut even further. In these “high cost” rural areas, it’s hard enough for one wireless carrier to cost justify much less four.
With the improved bandwidth and latency, LTE would bring broadband that almost rivals next generation wired broadband technologies to many Americans who currently can’t even get a decent first generation wired broadband connection. At a time when many Americans are dropping their land lines for voice and data services and switching to wireless only, LTE wireless carriers will increasingly compete with wired broadband providers. For many rural Americans, this might be the only advanced broadband technology to which they will have access.
[Cross-posted at High Tech Forum]
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