T-Mobile announced a new premium rate plan Thursday, Go5G Plus, which guarantees two-year device payment plans and that current customers get the same new phone promotions as new customers, for $90 a month for a single line. Go5G Plus offers everything Magenta Max offers, including unlimited premium data, Netflix and Apple TV. It adds an extra 10 GB of mobile hot spot data for a total of 50 GB per month and 15 GB of high-speed data in Canada and Mexico. T-Mobile also offered to pay off locked phones of customers that want to switch from another network. “Ten years ago, we started the Un-carrier movement by ridding the industry of two-year service contracts,” said CEO Mike Sievert: “A decade after that first Un-carrier move, the Carriers are still focused on trying to lock customers down. … At T-Mobile, we just think differently.”
Canopy Spectrum, which holds 84 C-band licenses, said it will abide by recently announced concessions by major carriers to protect radio altimeters near some airports (see 2304030070). “These Voluntary Commitments will support full-power deployments across the C-Band, and are crafted to minimize the operational impact on Canopy’s C-Band operations,” said a filing Thursday in docket 18-122.
Sierra Nevada Corp. (SNC) met with FCC Wireless Bureau staff on the company’s 2018 proposal to use 95 GHz spectrum for enhanced flight vision systems (EFVS) on aircraft. The Haystack Observatory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology raised objections (see 2203250061). The company discussed “spectrum sharing issues and SNC noted that it was working collaboratively to resolve concerns from passive users,” said a filing posted Wednesday in docket 19-140: “SNC’s experimental testing supports a conclusion that the proposed radar use will emit below the ITU recommended protections to radio astronomy for excess data loss. SNC will submit supplemental technical information once a new report is finalized.”
Representatives of groups representing the deaf and hard of hearing said they support a limited waiver sought by the ATIS Hearing Aid Compatibility (HAC) Task Force for HAC rules (see 2303310060), in a meeting with staff from the FCC Wireless and Consumer and Governmental Affairs bureaus. “The rationale for supporting the short-term limited waiver was to ensure that the wireless industry could have the time they need to address problems found with the testing methodology for volume control” in the rules, said a filing posted Tuesday in docket 20-3. “We are encouraged that industry is actively engaged in the [Telecommunications Industry Association’s volume control task group] and look forward to contributions from industry so that any testing issues can be addressed and solutions found,” said the Hearing Loss Association of America and Gallaudet University's Deaf/Hard of Hearing Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Technology.
FCC commissioners approved a draft order amending part 2 of the agency’s rules to make “non-substantive, editorial revisions” to the commission’s frequency allocation table, “primarily” based on decisions from the 2019 World Radiocommunication Conference and an NPRM proposing modifications based on the 2015 WRC (see 2303300070). It was OK'd before commissioners' meeting Thursday and the item was deleted from the agenda. Also deleted, an order tackling low-power TV and TV translator rules, approved earlier this week (see 2304180055).
Arguments against opening the 6 GHz band to unlicensed operations rely on "flawed and unreliable" analysis, tech industry representatives told aides to the four FCC commissioners, per a docket 18-295 filing Monday. They said Evergy's claims of potential interference from 6 GHz low-power indoor operations from utility use of the band (see 2303020077) relied on a "carefully manufactured, unrealistic, worse-than-worst-case study." They said FirstEnergy's arguments about interference by low-power indoor devices in the 6 GHz band to its licensed operations (see 2301130037) made such errors as artificially maximizing line of sight to microwave receivers ignoring real-world power levels. They said supposed interference events in Miami highlighted by APCO (see 2211220044) involved devices not operating under the FCC's 6 GHz rules and apparently were operating improperly in the band. Meeting with the FCC were reps from Apple, Broadcom, Cisco Systems, Google, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Meta, Microsoft and Qualcomm. APCO, FirstEnergy and Evergy reps didn't comment.
The FCC's robotext order approved in March (see 2303160061) imposes numerous obligations on mobile carriers and messaging services but is unlikely to reduce the proliferation of spam text messages, High Tech Forum President Richard Bennett said Monday in docket 21-402. "These mechanisms won't work" and the agency should reset the inquiry to get a better understanding of the subject matter, he said.
Reducing support for mobile carriers in Puerto Rico could mean delays or indefinite deferrals of projects to restore, harden and expand networks, T-Mobile representatives told aides to the four FCC commissioners, per a docket 18-143 filing Monday. Cutting support also could violate the Administrative Procedure Act because the record shows ample evidence for the need for additional funding to support hardening and resiliency on the island, it said.
NTIA wants comments by June 16 on its proposed information collection for the $1.5 billion Public Wireless Supply Chain Innovation Fund, said a notice in Monday's Federal Register. The agency released a notice of funding opportunity last week (see 2304120062).
Wireless microphone technology stakeholders proposed a set of bandwidth and transmit power limits for wireless multichannel audio system operations in the 470-608 MHz band. In a docket 21-115 filing last week, they said the limits should help expedite the FCC opting to allow use of WMAS. They also agreed to transmit spectrum mask and RF bandwidth limit specifications and to keep existing transmit power limits for unlicensed and licensed operations for frequency bands other than the ones shared with TV broadcasting. Signatories of the filing included several professional sound engineers and designers for the entertainment and professional sports industries, plus audio equipment suppliers, professional entertainers and recording studios.