China's mobile market is about to get a significant boost, one of the 4G variety. While the state-run
Chinese news agency Xinhua reported over a week ago that China's 4G
network would be switched on December 18
th, what remained to be seen was how the country's major telecommunication companies would be licensed to
access it. Today we have received our answer.
China's three major mobile carriers,
China Mobile,
China Telecom and
China Unicom will all receive
access to China's homegrown TD-LTE
network, while
China Telecom and
China Unicom will also receive licenses for the more popular and international FDD-LTE
network.
This is not
China's first experience with 4G speeds, as a few
Chinese cities have experimented with the technology in the past. However, those experiments were just that and were limited to the cities they were placed in. December 18
th represents the day China's nationwide 4G
network is turned on. Unfortunately, the vast majority of
Chinese citizens will still be limited to 3G or slower speeds as the “nationwide”
network currently only supports the nation's largest cities.
This development also allows
China Mobile to add the iPhone to their list of supported devices. The iPhone is not compatible with its current 3G-SCDMA
network.
Jumping into the 4G future cost
China a pretty penny, with its original investment into the
network totaling 500 billion
yuan ($82 billion USD) and is estimated to reach as high as 1 trillion
yuan by the end of the project.