Verizon eventually added C-band coverage to its Ultra Wideband service
T-Mobile’s 5G layer cake relies heavily on low and mid-band spectrum
Qualcomm would love to see 5G mmWave succeed
Chip designer Qualcomm would love to see mmWave succeed. It sells chips that allow smartphones to connect with these signals while also selling the silicon needed for small cell hotspots that deliver 5G mmWave signals. Qualcomm’s Visak Dhingra, a senior director of business development at the company, puts down the low and mid-band 5G experience in venues like stadiums, concert halls, and shopping malls by saying, “We are getting used to having a suboptimal experience in these kinds of places. What millimeter wave does is give you a cost-efficient way of serving those places in the best manner.”
With 40,000 mmWave base stations deployed, and 20,000 in Japan, mmWave is not totally dead. In fact, several countries plan to auction off more mmWave spectrum. But sales of 5G equipment are expected to decline this year and as a result, we wouldn’t expect wireless firms to be opening their wallets to purchase more mmWave equipment.
While we don’t hear Verizon trying to pump up 5G mmWave at the expense of low and mid-band spectrum, it certainly seems that Qualcomm continues to do so although it has a financial reason to push high-band for 5G. Could things change by the time 5G gets long in the tooth and 6G is talked about daily? For the answer to that, all we can say is stay tuned.