
Owners of LTE-enabled Apple devices in France wonât get to enjoy the benefits of speedy cellular downloads before the end of 2013 amid lobbying between the countryâs wireless carriers and the agency for telecommunications ARCEP.
The countryâs local carriers like Orange and SFR last year spent to the tune of â¬1.2 billion, or approximately $1.6 billion, to acquire the 800MHz band.
The problem is, this radio frequency is supported neither by the iPhone 5 nor by many mobile devices from other vendors, including Samsung. Moreover, these carriers are now asking the ARCEP to wait until at least end of 2013 before refarming the 1,800MHz spectrum, which is compatible with Appleâs handsetâ¦
TechCrunch [1] relays a Les Ãchos [2] Â story:
Last July, Bouygues Telecom sent a request to the ARCEP to reuse its old 2G 1,800 MHz band for LTE communications. It would give a head start to the third largest telecommunications company. According to the French law, the ARCEP has up to eight months to reply.
Carriers Bouygues Telecom, Free, Orange and SFR will get to present their arguments to the ARCEP on Thursday, February 7.
The report goes on to note that Bouygues Telecom wanted to reuse its 1,800 MHz band in early 2013, but the ARCEP will âmiss the markâ because carriers are âhaving a hard time laying out its 3G network and meeting ARCEPâs coverage requirementsâ.
Thatâs bad news for the owners of cellular-enabled iPhone 5, iPad 4 and iPad mini, which all support LTE networking. Apple last week released the iOS 6.1 firmware which expanded LTE support on 36 new carriers , including markets like Italy, Denmark, Switzerland and several Middle Eastern countries.

Last year, the iPhone maker had to change the âiPad Wi-Fi + 4Gâ name to the âiPad Wi-Fi + Cellularâ variant due to limited availability of 4G in markets like Australia.
The complete list of supported LTE carriers is available on Appleâs web site [3] .
Links
- ^ TechCrunch (techcrunch.com)
- ^ Les Ãchos (www.lesechos.fr)
- ^ Appleâs web site (www.apple.com)
No comments:
Post a Comment