|

Verizon LTE: Upgrade Now or Wait?

Note: This article was published while I was in my early 20s. I was much younger and dumber. Please don't hold it against me. One of the perils of having a 20+ year old website!

At the beginning of this month, Verizon announced their brand-new “4G” LTE network, boasting speeds of up to 12mbps, or about 12x faster than their 3G network. This sounds awesome for us bandwidth hogs, but there is a bit of a trade-off. Before the announcement I was considering holding off on my end of December upgrade if it meant I’d get a shinny new LTE capable phone. Here’s why I am waiting.

First, let me say that these are the reasons that I am not upgrading yet, not necessarily why you shouldn’t. However, these are reasons you should consider.

Coverage: Number 1 on this list is I don’t have coverage in my area. As a matter of fact, most places don’t yet… (click for larger version)

map from droid-life.comAs you can see, it’s a handful of cities that support LTE. This is along with over 60 major airports that are also supporting it. It’s also unknown when LTE will be rolled out into other areas.

I Don’t Fly That Much: With 60 airports supporting LTE, I might be able to justify an upgrade if I were flying all the time, but I don’t. I fly once or twice a year at best. I can’t justify shelling out extra cash for just that. Oh, by the way….

It Costs More: $50 for 5GB and $80 for 10GB of data per month. This is up from $29.99/mo for unlimited on 3G. This price isn’t actually all that bad, considering you’re getting a much faster network, but it’s not something I’m ready to pay for yet, even if there was coverage in my area. Especially because….

There are no Cell Phones Supporting LTE Yet: There are currently 2 LTE devices on the market, and both are USB connectors for your laptop. As I stated earlier, I don’t travel that much so this wouldn’t be a great purchase for me, especially since I have an iPad. Rumor has it that Verizon will address this in January.

So Who Should Upgrade to LTE?

It seems, as with most technological advances, those in a business setting are most prone to try the LTE network on for size first. Those that travel from city to city, require a constant Internet connection, and can hopefully get the company to pay for it. For the regular old consumer, if you’re in one of the major cities the earliest will probably be Summer 2011 (I’m guessing the first LTE smartphones will hit the market then). If you’re not in a major city, you may have a ways to go, as LTE won’t be nationwide until 2013.

Similar Posts

  • |

    My Desk – 10 Years Apart

    While browsing through Flickr the other day, I came across a sight I hadn’t seen in nearly 10 years – what my desk looked like my junior year of college. I posted it on various social media sites to much amusment and lots of great comments, but I decided here I’d post a Then and…

  • Android’s Web Based Market

    Note: This article was published while I was in my early 20s. I was much younger and dumber. Please don’t hold it against me. One of the perils of having a 20+ year old website!A few weeks ago, the fine folks at Google announced the web based version of their Android Market. Much like the iPhone/iPad App…

  • Droid Accessories

    Note: This article was published while I was in my early 20s. I was much younger and dumber. Please don’t hold it against me. One of the perils of having a 20+ year old website!To continue my love affair with the Droid, today I’m writing about the Droid accessories I use the most. I created…

  • |

    Should we Charge Extra for IE Development?

    The exact question was worded this way: Has the time come to charge clients extra for getting their site to work in any version of IE? It’s an interesting question to say the least, and one that comes up every so often when a developer is frustrated with something that works fine in Chrome/Firefox/Safari but not…