Showing posts with label MetroPCS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MetroPCS. Show all posts

Where Is 4G LTE Available in 2025?

T-Mobile 4G HSPA+ in 100 Markets in U.S.

Sprint / Clearwire 4G Wimax Network for 4G Phones & Data Cards

Verizon 4G LTE Cities in Yellow Dots 3G in Red 

MetroPCS LTE Map for Phones 

When 4G networks first emerged in the late 2000s and early 2010s, coverage was spotty and limited to select cities. At that time, maps showed patchy footprints for carriers like Verizon, Sprint, and T-Mobile, while many consumers wondered when their own neighborhoods would get faster speeds. Fast forward to 2025, and 4G LTE is everywhere — it has become the foundation of mobile connectivity around the world. Even though 5G is expanding rapidly, 4G remains critical for coverage, fallback, and reliability. This article explores the state of 4G coverage today, how to check availability, why LTE still matters, and what to expect in the future as mobile networks evolve.

How to Check 4G Coverage Today

Consumers now have access to several tools to determine whether 4G is available in their area. Carrier-provided maps remain the most common, but they often exaggerate or generalize availability. Independent crowdsourced tools have grown in popularity because they show real-world user experience instead of theoretical signal footprints. Crowdsourced coverage maps compile data from actual smartphone users running signal tests. These maps typically show 2G, 3G, 4G, and 5G layers side by side. Independent services also allow filtering by frequency band, technology, or carrier, which is particularly useful when trying to determine indoor reliability or rural signal strength. Government maps, such as those produced by regulatory agencies, display standardized coverage claims from carriers, although they may not capture local dead zones. Because of this, savvy consumers cross-check multiple sources before deciding on a carrier or mobile plan.

4G in the United States

Near-Universal Coverage

In the United States, 4G LTE has achieved near-universal penetration. The major carriers — Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile — all claim to cover more than 99% of the U.S. population with LTE. Smaller regional carriers and MVNOs piggyback on these networks, so LTE availability extends even to rural customers served indirectly.

Urban vs. Rural Divide

In dense cities, LTE service often overlaps with 5G, providing a seamless handoff when 5G coverage drops. In rural areas, LTE remains the most reliable option. Remote towns, highways, and agricultural zones often depend on lower-band LTE frequencies that provide broader coverage at the cost of speed.

Carrier Differences

Verizon has historically emphasized LTE reliability and still maintains strong coverage across both population centers and rural regions. AT&T has integrated LTE with its advanced voice network, making Voice over LTE a standard for most customers. T-Mobile aggressively markets 5G but continues to rely heavily on LTE as a backbone, especially in areas where its newer spectrum has yet to reach.

Global 4G Availability

4G LTE has become the global standard for mobile connectivity. In many parts of the world, especially developing regions, 4G leapfrogged older technologies and became the first widely available high-speed network. Europe maintains extensive LTE coverage, with many rural and coastal areas still depending primarily on 4G rather than 5G. In Asia, countries like South Korea, Japan, and China led early LTE adoption and now run dense networks, while rural Asia continues to rely on LTE even as 5G expands in metropolitan hubs. In Africa and Latin America, LTE is still the dominant mobile technology. While 5G launches are happening in select capitals, 4G provides the everyday connectivity backbone for the majority of subscribers. Globally, billions of devices still depend on LTE, and coverage maps in 2025 show it as the default layer of connectivity almost everywhere.

Why 4G Still Matters in 2025

Despite the hype around 5G, LTE remains essential for several reasons. First, it provides fallback coverage. Phones constantly switch between 5G and LTE depending on signal strength. When 5G drops or becomes overloaded, LTE picks up the slack. Second, it powers voice and messaging. Voice over LTE is now the default method for phone calls, and even in 5G zones, your calls often rely on LTE networks. Text messaging services also continue to run through LTE for redundancy. Third, LTE ensures device compatibility. Not all phones, especially budget or older models, support 5G. For millions of users worldwide, LTE is the highest-speed technology their devices can access. Fourth, LTE provides stronger indoor penetration. It operates on lower frequencies that travel farther and penetrate walls better than many high-band 5G frequencies, making LTE more reliable inside homes, schools, and office buildings. Finally, LTE is more resilient in rural and harsh environments. In remote areas, LTE remains more stable and efficient, covering mountainous regions, highways, and farming areas with greater reliability than 5G.

Real-World Limitations of 4G

While LTE is widespread, coverage still has limitations. Dead zones persist in valleys, basements, and shielded indoor spaces that block signal. These small pockets frustrate users even in otherwise well-covered cities. Congestion is another issue. During peak hours or at crowded events, LTE speeds can slow dramatically as networks reach capacity. Weather interference can also affect performance, particularly in areas relying on higher-frequency bands. Finally, coverage maps themselves can be misleading. They may show an area as covered, but real-world speeds may not be usable in practice.

The Future of 4G

LTE will not disappear soon. Just as 3G networks persisted long after 4G arrived, LTE will remain for many years to come. Carriers continue to invest in LTE upgrades such as carrier aggregation, LTE-Advanced Pro, and improved backhaul. For at least the next decade, LTE will operate alongside 5G. Phones and IoT devices will move seamlessly between both networks, and many industries including agriculture, shipping, and emergency services will continue to rely heavily on LTE for its proven reliability. At the same time, older networks are being phased out. With 3G now gone, LTE has become the baseline layer, guaranteeing coverage while newer standards build on top. Looking further ahead, LTE will also serve as a bridge to 6G. While 6G is still on the horizon, LTE ensures backward compatibility for billions of devices. Even as experimental 6G systems emerge later this decade, LTE will remain the fallback safety net for global connectivity.

Consumer Tips for Checking LTE

Consumers can take practical steps to ensure they get the most from LTE. Test your own signal instead of relying only on maps by running speed and signal checks on your device. Compare indoor and outdoor performance, since coverage often differs dramatically. Check whether your phone supports the full range of LTE bands offered by your carrier. Devices with broader band support usually perform better. If you are planning a road trip, camping excursion, or travel abroad, research LTE coverage ahead of time, particularly in rural zones where fallback connectivity may be critical.

Conclusion

4G LTE is no longer the cutting edge of mobile technology, but it is still the backbone of wireless connectivity in 2025. From dense cities to remote highways, LTE ensures that billions of people remain connected when 5G cannot. It delivers dependable voice calls, solid internet browsing, and a crucial safety net in emergencies. While the future is moving toward faster 5G and eventually 6G networks, LTE will remain the quiet workhorse of mobile communications for many years. For consumers, that means reliable service, strong fallback coverage, and a reminder that the maps showing LTE availability may be the most important ones to check before switching carriers or traveling.

Who Has the Best 4G Coverage?


Staying connected on the go is essential, and reliable 4G coverage is key to ensuring you can browse, stream, and communicate without interruptions. Although 5G technology is expanding, 4G remains the backbone of mobile networks in many areas, offering widespread availability and dependable performance. But which carrier has the best 4G coverage in the United States? This article dives into a comprehensive comparison of the major U.S. carriers—Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, and U.S. Cellular—to help you determine who offers the best 4G coverage for your needs.

Why 4G Coverage Still Matters

Are Metropcs Customers Having Coverage Problems?

Outage Map of MetroPCS on Down Detector

I just discovered this outage map (downdetector.com).  Based on this map, it appears that MetroPCS must be having lots of problems. Does anyone know why?  We have been receiving lots of customer comments on our MetroPCS Coverage Map Reviews as well.  We have been receiving reports from Mountain View, Los Angeles, Sacramento, Las Vegas, San Jose, Phoenix, Portland, Long Beach, Miami, and San Diego.

Downdetector detects when technology fails. Just like the weather, service interruptions and outages can't be predicted, and just like a weatherman, they can tell you what is going on. More concretely, Downdetector offers a real-time overview of status information and outages for all kinds of services. We aim to track any service that its users consider vital to their everyday lives, including (but not limited to) internet providers, mobile providers, airlines, public transport and online services.

Is MetroPCS coverage map accurate of Alaska? 

Walmart & TracFone Offer Prepaid Wireless

The prepaid cell phone market continues to gain lots of momentum as consumers are still looking to save money. The new discount cell phone service is offered exclusively from Walmart through Tracfone Wireless, a subsidiary of America Movil. Walmart is currently offering two plans: the first is a $30 plan that provides 1,000 minutes, 1,000 texts, 30 megabytes of data and unlimited 411 for 30 days; the second for $45 gets you unlimited talk, text and data for 30 days. The discount plans prices do not include phones, which on Walmart.com's Straight Talk brand shop range from LG and Samsung models between a basic $39.98 device and a $328.88 phone with touch-screen, camera and video.

Free Ground Shipping

Free Ground Shipping

This should bring lots more competition from new sources that AT&T or Verizon cannot just buy out (i.e Alltell or Cingular). This should also translate into more reasonable prices for current plans in the not so distant future.

Ironically there are currently 16 Walmart stores listed in our database as having poor cell phone coverage around the US.  Hopefully, someone diligence from Walmart or Tracfone will find this information and take some action to fix the problems for its' customers.


Top Cell Tower Lease Rates by State

Who Leases Cell Phone Towers Pie Chart
Carriers Leasing Cell Phone Tower Space
What is the value of leasing a property or cell tower these days in various states? Here are some lease rate ranges we have uncovered from various sources the internet and have sorted this list from most lucrative to least lucrative.  What is most interesting about the States ranked below is that the most expensive lease states have the worse Verizon Wireless 3G coverage.  Verizon Wireless is spending a lot of money on LTE and we think these are the areas they are focusing on first.  The rates below apply to locations that will have more than 1,000 calls or data connections per hour at peak times and would require multiple carriers like AT&T, T-Mobile, Sprint, Clearwire, MetroPCS, Tracfone or another smaller regional carrier to be piggybacking on the same site.  Here is a list of what the rates could be ranked in order:

Massachusetts - $91K - $535K
New York - $30K to $535K
New Jersey - $39K - $514K
Maryland - $121K - $489K
Vermont - $92K - $412K
Arizona - $17K - $283K
New Hampshire - $158K - $412K
Pennsylvania - $23K - $331K
Florida - $20K - $310K
Georgia - $25K - $265K
Rhode Island - $27K - $290K
Virginia - $65K - $230K
Alabama - $25K - $226K
North Carolina - $23K - $206K
Alaska - $14K - $161K
Maine - $88K - $157K
West Virginia - $87K - $105K
Washington DC - $80K - $123K
South Carolina - $25K - $83K

Some of the variable determining lease rates include: Location, Cell Tower Type, Height, Latitude and Longitude, FCC Identification Number (if registered), Carriers on the Tower (if any), Owner of the Tower, Initial Owner/Developer of the Tower, Ground Lease Rate, Collocation Lease Rates

Cell Boosters: A Solution for Poor Cell Signals


Wherever there are dead cell zones, dropped calls, static during calls and generally, bad reception is bound to follow. Cell phone users that live in an area where there is not even one bar of reception anywhere in their vicinity will have a hard time rectifying their situation without a provider’s solution. However, for those that can pick up even one bar of reception, a cell booster is a very affordable solution to improve cellular signal reception.

In the simplest terms, cell boosters take weak cellular signals and amplify them within a home, office, or building. A typical cell booster kit includes an external antenna (for picking up weak signals), an amplifier (for boosting weak signal), and an internal antenna (for rebroadcasting the amplified signals). But how does one go about selecting the best cell booster?

There are a couple of things to keep in mind when shopping for a booster: application and frequency. There is a difference between a small home cellular repeater and one designed for a warehouse. Large, multi-story buildings or spaces larger than 30,000 square feet often require custom cell booster installation and the expertise of a specialist.

However, for smaller cell booster applications, the most important thing to take note of is frequency. Amplifiers operate on different frequencies including 800 MHz (Verizon, US Cellular, and Alltel), 1900 MHz (T-mobile, Sprint and Metro PCS), and iDEN (Nextel). For those that aren’t sure what frequency their carrier utilizes, a Dual Band booster is probably the best choice. These amplifiers operate on both the 800 MHz and 1900 MHz bands, covering most carriers (with the exception of Nextel).

Basic cell boosters typically fall into the $200 -$250 price range and can be installed with minimal technical assistance.

Unlimited Mobile to Mobile Calling Plans?

Bait & Switch Unlimited Calling Plans
Bait & Switch Unlimited Calling Plans . . . 

Every carrier now has unlimited calling plans.  However, we are doing some research on which wireless carriers claim to provide unlimited calling plans but then charge a fee something else.  The old "bait and switch" billing method without full disclosure.  Cell phone calling plans have always been complicated and somewhat confusing as they are now being blended with unlimited data plans.  Most people expect a flat fee every month but then see charges that they don't recognize or understand.

Please tell us below under comments below which carriers trick you into paying for an unlimited plan and then charge you for something else without fully disclosing it.   

Cheapest Unlimited Data Plans

Average Cell Phone Voice Minutes Used by Age
The smartphone data usage trend and the decline in cellular voice minute usage are concerning to the telecom industry.  In theory, you really don't really need to buy talk time minutes if you have a data plan or only use WiFi for making VoIP calls.  Carriers are constantly pushing their fast new 4G LTE networks but in reality, they compete with Free WiFi.  So as a consumer you should be smart about what you buy.  Here is a list of data plans in order of pricing. The trick is buying a phone on the provider network or having an unlocked phone that works on any of these networks.

Virgin Mobile - No Contract plan for $25 per month which includes unlimited data, text, and 300 calling minutes on 3G.

Tracfone / Net10 - No Contract $45 per month with unlimited data, text, and talk on 3G.

MetroPCS - No Contract for $40 per month with unlimited talk, and text. Some data roaming charges may apply as the network is limited in size but they do have an LTE network that is fast.

Boost Mobile  - No Contract: for $40 per month with unlimited talk, text, data, no roaming charges. 3G is available with some phones.

T-Mobile (Best Value!)- No Contract for $40 per month which includes unlimited data on 3G and 4G HSPA+ Blackberry phones will cost you $50 per month for unlimited data.  If you are an older customer hopefully you have been grandfathered into their old plan which costs $25 per month.  

Sprint - Requires a 2-year contract for $69.99 per month which includes unlimited data, text, and calling.

AT&T data plan - plans range in price from $15 for a 200 MB data plan and $25 per month for 2 MB. If are conscious about downloading video on WiFi their pricing plans might work for you. Caution because just like texting they have crazy data charges of $10 per 1 GB of data if you go over and the data is not reusable on monthly basis.  AT&T is also rolling out a 4G HSPA+ network.

Verizon Wireless - Requires customers to buy a mobile package that is more than $30 per month and you’re limited to 5GB per month.  They do have an LTE network coming out in 2011 but this will require you to purchase an LTE compatible phone.

T-Mobile + MetroPCS Is Good For Consumers


A MetroPCS (NYSE: PCS) and T-Mobile USA owned by Deutsche Telekom (NYSE: DTEGY) merger makes a lot of sense for the following reasons.  Here are 10 reasons this would be good for consumers.  
  1. Keep the integrity of a discount carrier intact.  
  2. MetroPCS has LTE spectrum that T-Mobile USA could use.
  3. More purchasing scale 43M customers (MetroPCS 9M + T-Mobile 34M)
  4. T-Mobile & MetroPCS have dead zone coverage gaps both can fill.
  5. Consumer friendly unlimited data plans would likely continue at both companies. 
  6. Fewer competing customers on a network = less data congestion.
  7. Consumers might have the option of using a GSM or CDMA 3G phones.
  8. T-Mobile HSPA+ 4G is very fast and the network is not congested.
  9. MetroPCS 4G LTE is very fast and the network is not congested.
  10. MetroPCS has been very aggressive using femtocell and DAS to improve coverage.
Deutsche Telekom is considering a stock swap transaction. However, I would support raising more capital in a T-Mobile USA IPO after the acquisition. MetroPCS shares jumped almost 30% instantly on the deal and currently has a market capitalization of around $3 billion.  MetroPCS seems to have plenty of cash in the bank of $2B and has annual revenue of approximately $5B.  So the combination would appear to be a strategy combining entities to have more scale for handset purchasing and spectrum allocation.  Considering the closest competitor is AT&T and Verizon who each have 90 to 100M+ subscribers.

MetroPCS has began deploying their LTE network before Verizon. MetroPCS is currently built around a CDMA 3G voice network and would be incompatible with T-Mobile’s GSM/HSPA network. However, in the future T-Mobile could use MetroPCS's LTE channels.  Reuters reported in an article "MetroPCS and T-Mobile are not a good technological or customer fit, one analyst said".   MetroPCS is a CDMA carrier in 3G and T-Mobile is a GSM carrier.  However, LTE is LTE and new handsets should be cross carrier compatible if the industry does the consumers right.

A combination of Leap Wireless 7M subscribers also makes sense in the future but right now LTE spectrum is more important to T-Mobile I would bet.

Related Articles:
Where is MetroPCS Expanding Coverage?

Throttling vs Network Optimization of Traffic

Data Throttling vs Network Optimization of Traffic

The widespread use of smartphones, tablets and other sophisticated mobile devices – coupled with accelerating consumption of rich multimedia applications such as streaming video, live TV, social media, and instant video chat – is driving operators' evolution to LTE and other 4G network architectures for delivering mobile data services. Bytemobile's latest Mobile Analytics Report indicates that a tablet already generates three times the data volume generated by a comparable smartphone. With next-generation technology, including faster networks and larger devices supporting higher-resolution videos, the data generated from a single YouTube clip could increase by five times. Managing network capacity has become not only the single most important business challenge for operators and many are using different techniques.

Throttling mobile data is a method by reducing the speed of packets delivered to the user on the network.  Throttling is typically done when a user has exceeded the amount of data in a plan or is congesting the network by downloading too much video or content in an area.

Network optimization is a different technique used by the carriers.  It involves caching and compression to reduce the strain on the network.  The goal is to not reduced the user experience while preserving bandwidth on the network.

Bytemobile® Smart Capacity™ platforms enable mobile operators to deliver the best possible experience to their subscribers under all network conditions and to differentiate their services based on subscriber usage. The company's solutions have been deployed in the mobile networks of more than 130 operators worldwide to manage escalating demand for capacity due to video and other rich multimedia content and applications. With Smart Capacity, mobile operators can improve utilization of existing capacity and control operating expenses, while increasing revenue growth and profitability. Bytemobile is the industry leader in video optimization with 50 operators under contract.

Byte Mobile's US customers include: AT&T laptop division, Metro PCS, Alltel, Cricket and Sprint.  Verizon & T-Mobile are not currently customers and may be using a different method of detecting high data volume users and throttling them instead.  MetroPCS is the most widely deployed customer in the US to date.

ByteMobile competitors in include Flash Networks, Open Wave, Cisco, Ericsson, Allot, Sandvine.

To learn more, visit Bytemobile.com.

Prepaid Wireless Networks Uncovered (MVNO's)

Which Network Are You Really On?

Unlike the major carriers (ie. Verizon Wireless, Sprint / Nextel, T-Mobile, AT&T), Amp'd, Boost Mobile, TracFone, MetroPCS & Virgin Mobile do not own its own network of cell towers. These prepaid cellular phone companies are all MVNOs (Mobile Virtual Network Operator). MVNOs buy large batches of minutes from the traditional wireless carriers, piggybacking on their national networks. Amp'd leases Verizon's network, Boost Mobile uses Nextel's network, TracFone uses AT&T's network and Virgin uses Sprint's network. Hence, the reason we do not list these carriers in our list of coverage complaints. If you experience dead zone while using any prepaid phones please submit their respective network operator.

Sprint Board Blocks MetroPCS Merger

Dan Hesse's Sprint Board Blocks Metro PCS Merger 
Today, David Faber of CNBC reported that Sprint (NYSE: S) and regional carrier MetroPCS (NYSE: PCS) were hours from announcing an $8 billion merger.  For some reason Sprint's board rejected it even after it had CEO Dan Hesse's blessing.  This is not exactly a vote of confidence by the Board and brings into question the longevity of Dan's current job as CEO.  I happen to like Dan and think he is a great CEO.  I would be curious to see who were the dissenting votes on the Board?  Where the dissenting votes simply trying to protect their Director jobs?  Does anyone know what happened with the Board of Directors and why they would have rejected the deal?

Sprint's Board of Directors including Dan Hesse includes:  Robert R. Bennett, Gordon M. Bethune, Larry C. Glasscock, James H. Hance, Jr., Daniel R. Hesse, V. Janet Hill, Frank Ianna, Sven-Christer Nilsson, William R. Nuti, Rodney O'Neal.
Robert R. BennettGordon M. BethuneLarry C. GlasscockJames H. Hance, Jr.V. Janet HillFrank IannaSven-Christer NilssonWilliam R. NutiRodney O'Neal

GSM CDMA Carrier Handset Competition Fair?


AT&T will soon consolidate T-Mobile and become the only GSM carrier in the US.  Tracfone is a pre-paid carrier that offers both GSM and CDMA so it doesn't really count.  Is this fair competition?  T-Mobile has been the only GSM alternative to AT&T and post-acquisition there will be none.  What happens to consumers who purchased GSM phones and want to move to another carrier?  What happens to the handset manufacturers around the World who want to sell their products in the US?  Why should consumers care about GSM?  If you travel internationally you will know what I am talking about.  GSM is the World standard for phones and allows you to travel in most countries around the World without buying a new phone.

Consumers will be facing very limited choices for wireless service in most regions. The result will be only two competing technologies (CDMA & GSM) that all wireless carriers use, all the small regional carriers have to negotiate roaming deals with either Verizon or AT&T if they want to offer full coverage to their customers. The deal would further entrench the playing field with one CDMA giant and one GSM giant and fair negotiations would be even harder.

Verizon is a CDMA carrier and Sprint operates iDen and CDMA phones that donot work in most countries when you travel around the world.   Smaller regional carriers MetroPCS, Leap, US Cellular and Tracfone all use  CDMA as well.  

US Wireless Subscribers Pie Chart Post AT&T & T-Mobile Merger

This is what the US wireless subscriber market will look like post an AT&T and T-Mobile merger.  Does this look like a pie chart that is promoting fair competition?  Is it fair that these two companies are the highest paying dividend stocks (5% annual) on Wall Street?   shareholder payout is approximately $10 billion dollars per year and the Verizon dividend is approximately $5 billion dollars per year.  Are our FCC and DOJ protecting us from the competition when the US is far behind the rest of the World with data speeds and connectivity?

If AT&T controls 130M customers and Verizon 102 million this will wipe out any ability for competition.  Sprint is already in trouble with its financial problems and will never be a formidable competitor. T-Mobile was actually starting to do some disruptive things to the largest two carriers Verizon and AT&T before the acquisition took place.  The technology disruption in using WiFi, 4G, and HSPA+ alone was enough to get AT&T to swoop in a buy the company to shut them up.   This chart alone should concern the Department of Justice when considering if there is fair competition in an already corrupt industry.  I will go on record to say that this merger will be the worst in US history for customers and competition if it goes through.  

How Each Carrier Defines 4G


4G is as confusing as ever to the average consumer.  Verizon and MetroPCS are launching their 4G LTE network and three out of the four major US carrier Verizon, Sprint, and T-Mobile promote the fastest 4G data networks.  However, each company defines 4G differently and none of them meet International Telecommunication Union standards. The ITU defines 4G as a connection capable of 100 mbps to 1 gbps. The cellular data network's 4G speeds don't even come close to this and the only marketing thing each carrier seems to agree upon is that 4G is just what comes after 3G. While the title of 4G isn't accurate by International Standards is meaningless the carriers now have created a new step of planned obsolescence.  Here is an article from Life Hacker which will try to simply each offering.  Read More.

Where is MetroPCS Expanding Coverage?

metro pcs coverage map

Metro by T-Mobile's current expansion plans, here are some general trends and areas where wireless carriers often focus their coverage expansion efforts:

Rural Cellular Association Conference

Rural Cellular Coverage Map

Did you know there are almost 160+ rural cellular companies that compete with AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile and others?  RCA is an association representing rural wireless telecommunications providers across the United States. rca-usa.org  Many of these same rural wireless carriers could be your best friend in the near future as wireless services become increasingly more competitive and local.  We think there is an enormous opportunity for these rural carriers to flex media marketing muscle and compete against the larger multi-billion dollar marketing behemoths.  We will be there to meet regional wireless operators, service providers and expose them to our database of rural cell phone dead zones and dropped call areas.

18th Annual RCA Convention - APRIL 27-30, 2010 - Rio Hotel & Casino • Las Vegas • Nevada

Hot Topics at the Conference 
04/21/10 RCA Applauds FCC's Vote to Eliminate In-Market Roaming Exclusion
04/08/10 FCC Announces Broadband Action Agenda
04/02/10 FCC to Hold Workshop on Critical Infrastructure and Information Collection
03/31/10 RCA Comments on 700 MHz Mobile Equipment Capability


Exhibiting Companies Include: 
AeroVoice
Airway Technologies
Alcatel-Lucent
ArdaCOM
ARIS Software, Inc.
Associated Network Partners, Inc. (ANPI)
Astellia, Inc.
Brightpoint
Cellatel, LLC
CellCast Technologies, LLC
Cellebrite USA
ClearSky Mobile Media
Commnet Supply - Telmar Network Technology
CommSoft
Connectiv Solutions
DigiCell International, Inc.
Eastpointe Industries, Inc.
eSecuritel
Exalt Communications, Inc.
Fibrebond Corporation
Flash Technology
GetWireless, LLC
G Unwired, Inc.
HickoryTech - Information Solutions
Hyde Company
Info Directions
Interop Techonologies
Intrado
Jinny Software, Ltd.
JTWO Wireless, LLC
Kyocera Communications, Inc.
Lemko Corporation
LG Electronics Mobilecomm USA, Inc.
MACH Americas
Mid America Computer Corporation
Movius
National Information Solutions (NISC)
Nexlink Communications, LLC
OSG Billing Services
Pario Solutions
Personal Communciations Devices, LLC
Planet Cellular, Inc.
Platinum Wireless
Primal Technologies
PSA
RADWIN
Rosenberger LEONI Site Solutions
Sabre Industries, Inc.
SaskTel International
Sonoran Systems, Inc.
Syniverse Technologies
Talley, Inc.
Taqua
TeleCommunication Systems, Inc.
Telsasoft
Tempest Telecom Solutions, LLC
Trango Systems
Transaction Network Services
US Mobile Phones
USA Digital Communications
V-Comm, LLC
Velleros, Inc.
Walker & Associates
WAU, Inc.
Wes-Tec, Inc.
Wireless One
Xentris Wireless
YAM Wireless
Yap, Inc.

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