AT&T's 5G Plus Network Expand to 10 More Cities
AT & T's 5G buildout continues to grow until the 2020 calendar
jumps. On Friday, the carrier announced its expansion of its
millimeter-wave 5G rollout to 10 more cities by the end of 2019, giving
AT&T a total of 35 cities.
The list of 10 new cities shared in a company's blog post on Friday includes Cleveland, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Miami and Miami Gardens, Florida, Ocean City, Maryland and Menlo Park, Oakland, Redwood City and San Bruno, California.
With the first millimeter-wave expansion, this flavor of 5G called AT&T's 5G Plus does not work in some parts of the entire city, unlike AT & T's low-band 5G or traditional 4G EE. AT&T calls "5GE"). The milli-wave network is much faster than the low-band 5G or 4G, however, as our brief examination last year yielded about 2 Gbps speeds.
T-Mobile still has a total of 5G leads, adding over 200 million people nationwide, adding additional cities and AT&T can now benefit from 35 meter counts in verimeter-wave coverage, which is Verizon's total of 31 toppings. It will be in late 2019.
However, Verizon allows anyone to purchase its millimeter-wave 5G devices for use on its network, but for AT&T's current 5G phone users, the Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus 5G only works on its low-band 5G device. Only 19 people live in the markets and are not in favor of millimeter-wave.
The devices expected to work in both millimeter-wave and low-band 5G this year.

The list of 10 new cities shared in a company's blog post on Friday includes Cleveland, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Miami and Miami Gardens, Florida, Ocean City, Maryland and Menlo Park, Oakland, Redwood City and San Bruno, California.
With the first millimeter-wave expansion, this flavor of 5G called AT&T's 5G Plus does not work in some parts of the entire city, unlike AT & T's low-band 5G or traditional 4G EE. AT&T calls "5GE"). The milli-wave network is much faster than the low-band 5G or 4G, however, as our brief examination last year yielded about 2 Gbps speeds.
T-Mobile still has a total of 5G leads, adding over 200 million people nationwide, adding additional cities and AT&T can now benefit from 35 meter counts in verimeter-wave coverage, which is Verizon's total of 31 toppings. It will be in late 2019.
However, Verizon allows anyone to purchase its millimeter-wave 5G devices for use on its network, but for AT&T's current 5G phone users, the Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus 5G only works on its low-band 5G device. Only 19 people live in the markets and are not in favor of millimeter-wave.
The devices expected to work in both millimeter-wave and low-band 5G this year.
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