4G technology will make you more powerful than ever before.

What is 4G? It's simple. 4G is the fourth generation of wireless. 2G
brought us digital voice and text messaging. 3G brought us smartphones,
fast web browsing and apps.
What will the next evolution of wireless bring? Well, for one thing
business applications that used to require wired networks will be
unleashed. And it will be fast. Lightning fast.
But not all 4G services will be the same. We have taken the necessary steps to make Momentis 4G
the best 4G service available.
The first cellphone in the U.S. to use fourth-generation wireless
technology — better known as 4G — debuted this month with the promise of
super-fast download speeds, smooth video streams and even video chat.
The phone came from Sprint Nextel Corp.; Verizon Wireless plans to
launch its 4G network this year, with AT&T Inc. to follow in 2011.
But how revolutionary is 4G? Forrester Research analyst Charles Golvin
talked about how it could change mobile communication as we know it
today.
This offers an exciting time for
consumers and entrepreneurs. This is a grand slam home run business
venture to be part of the 4G wireless wimax revolution and era of todays
wireless worlds.
Fourth generation (4G) technology will offer many advancement to the
wireless market, including downlink data rates well over 100 Mbps, low
latency, very efficient spectrum use and low-cost implementations. With
impressive network capabilities, 4G enhancement promise to bring the
wireless experience to an entirely new level with impressive user
applications, such as sophisticated graphical user interfaces, high-end
gaming, high-definition video and high-performance imaging.
Consumer expectations for mobile handsets and similar products are
becoming more and more sophisticated. Consumers are demanding a better
user experience along with more advanced and useful applications on a
more ergonomic device.
The current 3G devices are good, but they will have to improve in areas
like imaging and processing power to support future 4G applications
like three dimensional (3D) and holographic gaming, 16 megapixel
(MPixel) smart cameras and high-definition (HD) camcorders.
Applications like these will demand more processing power than the
current 3G handsets offer, requiring more efficient applications
processors.
The move to 4G networks will allow service providers to offer
the impressive applications that will drive users to upgrade to the
new phones. Current downlink data rates are less than 10 megabits per
second (Mbps); 4G systems will offer downlink data rates well over 100
Mbps, an improvement of 10 times over 3G. 4G systems will also have low
latency, improving the consumer experience. With flexible network
connections, efficient use of spectrum and impressive user applications,
4G will offer what consumers want.
How much faster is 4G?
Most 3G subscribers today can expect about 1 megabit per second
download speeds on average. 4G networks might deliver as fast as 6 or 7
megabits per second initially. Eventually, a 4G network hopes to be
about 10 times faster than 3G.
Will 4G improve voice calls and texting?
The impact on traditional cellular services, like voice and text
messaging, will be negligible because 4G networks are being designed for
data.
However, because of the specific airwaves that AT&T and Verizon
will use for their 4G networks, consumers will find that these networks
provide better service indoors than some of today's networks.
What will 4G enable us to do on our phones that we can't do with 3G?
One thing you'll be able to do is watch a high-definition video stream on services like Hulu.
It will also be possible to take information from the Internet and
interact with the real world in ways that maybe weren't dreamt of a few
years ago. For example, if you were traveling in a foreign country, you
could hold up your phone and look at anything written in another
language, and the phone would show it to you in real time as if it were
written in your own language.
A car is going to be very much connected in the future. Many cars have
navigation systems today, but many of those navigation systems are
offline. But tomorrow, as 4G networks expand, that navigation system
will be updated in real time with traffic information, changes in new
roads or streets becoming one-way.
What should consumers know about the two 4G technologies: WiMax,
which Sprint uses, and LTE, which Verizon and AT&T will use?
The vast majority of the next generation of networks will be built
using LTE. For example, when you travel overseas — if you have service
from an LTE network, it's more likely your device will work in 4G in
other parts of the world.
Because the cell providers will be using different technologies, will some be faster than others?
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