2012: The Year LTE Becomes a Standard, Not a Luxury

The latest data from ABI Research projects that 87 million 4G devices will ship this year, with the lion's share coming equipped with LTE connectivity. ABI analyst Phil Solis says that while LTE has a long way to go in becoming ubiquitous throughout the world, it's very close to reaching a tipping point in the U.S. where it becomes a consumer expectation rather than a luxury. And ironically, Solis thinks that Sprint's early build-out of its WiMax network has as much to do with LTE's rapid rise here as anything else, even though Sprint has now started shifting away from WiMax to embrace LTE.
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"We mostly see this in countries where WiMax was positioned to be a real threat," says Solis, who expects that LTE's status as the nation's dominant wireless technology will be cemented once Apple releases an LTE-capable version of the iPhone sometime this year. "WiMax has pulled LTE forward and caused carriers to move to LTE more quickly."

As LTE becomes the de facto mobile data standard, Solis says that consumers can expect more intense competition to lower prices for mobile data across the board since consumers won't be forced to go with Verizon anymore if they want access to the fastest mobile broadband technology. Right now he says that some LTE data plans are pricey since carriers want to recoup some of the capital expenditures they've paid to build out their networks. But as more and more users sign up for the services, the cost of delivering data will go down and carriers will face pressure to lower rates.

LTE, which stands for Long Term Evolution, is essentially a bridge from 3G technologies such as HSPA+ and EV-DO Rev. A to the 4G IMT-Advanced technologies that the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) says will deliver consistent speeds in the 100Mbps range.
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