Regulators put pressure on Sprint to remedy issues with iDEN network
Although Sprint has coughed up some $1 billion over the past few years in order to nix the interference between 2,200 public safety agencies across the US and its iDEN network, it apparently hasn't done enough. Reportedly, the FCC has warned Sprint that it "could lose access to the signal spectrum used by its Nextel- and Boost Mobile-branded wireless services" if it doesn't remedy the problem by June of 2008. Supposedly, Sprint is "working hard" to settle the issue, but it's not wasting any time asking the US Court of Appeals to get involved. The carrier claims that these shut down threats could force it to halt signups of Nextel-branded customers, and furthermore, around three million public-safety workers would purportedly lose service if the FCC did indeed shut down the Nextel network. 'Course, industry analysts are suggesting that regulators wouldn't really go through with shutting it down, but if nothing else, this should light a fire under Sprint to expedite the process.[Via PhoneScoop]



















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
maikel @ Nov 19th 2007 8:37PM
Yep,true. I remember a few months ago when they actually spend money on advertising how their network is much faster than AT&T w/ those data cards.
Wow!! Look at them now. Who's getting the last laugh now? They could have spend those millions $ on actually improving their network.Had their focus on the wrong thing specially when trying to compare yourself to the big AT&T.
Good for Them!!
Bryan @ Nov 20th 2007 8:18AM
is is funny because sprint's data network is better then at&t's?
Michael S @ Nov 27th 2007 10:51AM
maikel,
I believe this article is talking about Sprint's iDEN network, not the CDMA network that those data cards are used on. It's the iDEN network that's interfering, not the CDMA side.