DISH and nTelos Expand Pilot Program to Develop Fixed Wireless Broadband Service

Scott Greczkowski

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DISH and nTelos Expand Pilot Program to Develop Fixed Wireless Broadband Service

nTelos and DISH to offer service on a limited commercial basis to customers in four Virginia markets

WAYNESBORO, Va. & ENGLEWOOD, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Following a successful initial deployment in June 2013, DISH Network Corporation (NASDAQ: DISH) and NTELOS Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ: NTLS) announced today that nTelos and a wholly-owned subsidiary of DISH have executed an agreement to expand their pilot program to co-develop a fixed wireless broadband service. DISH and nTelos plan to offer the service commercially on a limited trial basis in markets where the two companies have a high concentration of customers. The trial markets include Roanoke, Staunton, Waynesboro and Charlottesville, Va. The companies are targeting early 2014 for rollout, with trial services potentially reaching up to half-a-million homes.

“Results from the first phase of our trial were encouraging,” said James A. Hyde, CEO of NTELOS Holdings Corp. “By combining forces and leveraging our collective assets, we have been able to successfully deliver fixed wireless broadband service with competitive throughput and speeds. Expanding the trial will give us the opportunity to stress test the network for coverage and reliability, and to further evaluate the viability of a full commercial launch.”

“DISH has unique capabilities to support fixed broadband and is excited to move to the next phase of this trial,” said Tom Cullen, DISH executive vice president of Corporate Development. “With nearly a fifth of U.S. households underserved by broadband, a fixed wireless solution could deliver an additional broadband option to millions of consumers.”

Following a similar approach used in the initial deployment, nTelos and DISH will install outdoor routers designed to receive a 2.5 GHz LTE signal. These units are Ethernet connected to a wireless router in the home, facilitating broadband Internet access throughout the premises.
 
Agreed. Wish they would expand their trial to northern VA. I haven't lived in Charlottesville for over 30 years. :(
 
I currently have fixed wireless internet service. However, it would never be labeled "Broadband" more like barely faster than dial-up. It's all you can eat and cost much less than satellite.

Still when you're Off-the-Grid, any internet is better than no internet.
 
Hope it works out well.Would be nice to see it in other parts of the country.
 
Verizon has the better LTE network in all those area's, nTelos according to a friend that works for them laughs at this as the speeds are just not there. As a Dish installer I laugh at it cause I'll be damned if I'm going to carry a spool of cat5 around and connectors to install this crap if it becomes more wide spread. The idea here is WIRELESSSSSSS why in the hell require ethernet lines to run it!??!? If I remember right as of 5 seconds ago my cell phone works in my home just as good as it does outside.
 
Verizon has the better LTE network in all those area's, nTelos according to a friend that works for them laughs at this as the speeds are just not there. As a Dish installer I laugh at it cause I'll be damned if I'm going to carry a spool of cat5 around and connectors to install this crap if it becomes more wide spread. The idea here is WIRELESSSSSSS why in the hell require ethernet lines to run it!??!? If I remember right as of 5 seconds ago my cell phone works in my home just as good as it does outside.

The nTelos 3G Speeds are terrible. However, they are working on rolling out 4G over the next year. My hope would be that they are testing this service with 4G, but I certainly don't know if that is the case. As an nTelos customer, currently, their speed is not the draw. Low-cost, all-you-can-eat data/calling is.
 

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