The unexpectedly high prices in the AWS-3 auction may reflect carrier recognition that unlike the TV incentive auction, the AWS spectrum will be immediately available for use, with none of the same uncertainties, Guggenheim Partners analyst Paul Gallant told us in an email. “Hard to say why everyone missed it by so much, but it’s pretty remarkable what’s happened on pricing,” Gallant said. “It could be that only carriers themselves truly see where mobile and video are taking the Internet. And AWS is a bird in the hand. There’s plenty of hopefulness around the broadcast auction, but AWS is here and now, which is powerful.”
CEA, CTIA and the Telecommunications Industry Association asked the FCC to delay comment deadlines on the TV incentive auction procedures public notice for 30 days. Comments are currently due Jan. 30, replies Feb. 27. The FCC approved the PN on a 3-2 vote at the December open meeting (see 1412110065). Interested parties need time to “examine the novel issues raised by this auction and to develop a meaningful record in this proceeding,” the groups said. The AWS-3 auction is still in progress and several likely incentive auction bidders also are bidding in that auction, they said. “Key personnel for these companies are currently sequestered and may be unavailable to assist with comments and/or reply comments until bidding is complete.” Even after the auction is complete, there's a prohibition of certain communications between bidders for another 10 days, the groups reminded the FCC. “The requested extension will permit individual Auction 97 bidders to fully dedicate the resources of their auction experts to comments filed in this proceeding, and it will also permit industry associations such as Petitioners to engage in greater discussion with their member companies regarding comments and reply comments.” The Expanding Opportunities for Broadcasters Coalition filed in support of the delay. "This request is in the public interest and will provide interested parties an adequate opportunity to analyze the highly technical proposals in the Comment PN and address, in a meaningful manner, the important questions regarding the implementation of this complex and novel auction," the group said.
The industry road map for ensuring indoor location accuracy for wireless calls to 911 has gathered wide support and the FCC should move quickly to incorporate key provisions into its rules, CTIA said in a filing at the commission. The four major carriers, APCO and the National Emergency Number Association proposed the plan last month. “Public safety representatives and agencies from across the country eager for dispatchable location,” technology companies, members of the accessibility community and the “national carriers and wireless associations including those that represent small carriers” all support the plan, CTIA said in reply comments filed in docket 07-114, posted by the FCC Wednesday. “The Roadmap is a concrete, carefully-negotiated and -balanced solution to help deliver new and better E911 location accuracy,” CTIA said. “To be clear, however, the Roadmap is intended to function as an alternative -- not a supplement -- to the proposed standards and timetables in the Commission’s NPRM.” TruePosition, which offers an alternative solution for indoor location accuracy, however, said it's hardly a “consensus” plan. It's “opposed by the vast majority of public safety officials who have participated in this proceeding” and “there is scant evidence that the Plan would actually work,” TruePosition said. The carriers just want to “postpone fixing” a problem they caused to begin with, the company said: “The premise of the Roadmap is that if the FCC will simply leave the carriers alone they will someday fix the problem of poor indoor location capabilities for emergency 911 calls.” Officials with Telecommunications for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing reported on a meeting at the FCC. The FCC should look at the road map and other solutions, advocates for the group said. “We want the same capacity we had when we had the landline phones,” the officials said. “During those days, all we had to do was to dial 9-1-1, and help would come, with much success. When we call for an emergency, the first objective is for the dispatcher to get our call, and immediately know where the call came from. Then the dispatcher can send police, fire, or paramedics to the scene of the emergency.” “The Roadmap outlines a clear path to delivering first responders the necessary ‘dispatchable location’ information in an accelerated timeframe,” PCIA said in its reply comments. The plan also “leverages technologies that have been proven successful in commercial location services,” like Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, “rather than proprietary technologies without a commercial track record,” the group said. The road map was “the result of tough negotiations between APCO and NENA, on the one hand, and the Carrier Signatories, on the other,” AT&T told the FCC. APCO acknowledged the complaints of some 20 public safety commenters left out of negotiations on the road map. “Since finalizing the Roadmap, APCO has reached out extensively, and will continue to do so, to describe the Roadmap to all interested stakeholders and respond to any questions,” the group said. “Further, APCO welcomes the active assistance of these groups to implement the Roadmap’s solutions to this complex problem.”
Comment deadlines are now set on a Nov. 21 public notice asking for “updated information” to help the FCC assess whether the agency’s hearing aid compatibility rules for wireless handsets effectively meet the needs of the deaf and hard of hearing, said a Tuesday public notice. Comments are due Jan. 22, replies Feb. 6.
Smart watch company Burg announced an all-stainless steel smart watch that can make and receive phone calls and texts without connecting to a smartphone. The watch comes with its own SIM card or can pair with an Android phone or with non-Android phones via Bluetooth, the company said Tuesday. It includes a Media Tek chip; voice activation; fitness apps to track steps, calories, sleep and sports schedule; GPS; Wi-Fi; an MP3/MP4 player; FM radio; voice recorder; 2 megapixel camera; contact list, calendar; calculator; alarm clock; 8 GB memory (upgradable to 16 GB with microSD) card; and a charging microSD port. The BURG 27, due in March, will debut at CES where pricing will be announced. Also at CES, the company will launch a Swarovski crystal Burg smartwatch/bracelet and a Wearables Franchise Shop, it said.
ZTE USA announced availability of the ZTE Speed for $99 through Boost Mobile’s no-contract wireless service. The smartphone packs 4G LTE, Android 4.4, a 4.5-inch display and a 1.2-GHz quad-core processor, the company said Tuesday. It includes a 4.5-inch display, 5-megapixel rear camera and 2-megapixel front camera, it said. Plans start at $35 per month.
T-Mobile CEO John Legere offered a bit of uncheer to his competitors Monday, on behalf of the un-carrier. A YouTube video shows Legere seated in front of a roaring fire reading a "The Night Before Christmas" parody from a big book titled Un-carrier Holidays. The poem has a special call out to AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson: “While Randall is nestled all snug in his bed, I’m up responding to tweets removing pain points instead. ... While AT&T and Verizon cling to contracts and red tape, we’ll gladly take their customers who Sprint to escape.”
Comments are due Jan. 21, replies Feb. 20, in response to a Nov. 10 rulemaking notice asking further questions about changes to rules governing the 800 MHz cellular service, the FCC said Monday. In rules adopted by the FCC at the same time, the agency changed how the cellular service was regulated, from a site-based to a geographically based regime (see 1411120015). The NPRM sought comment on adoption of a power spectral density model for the service and related technical rule changes, to facilitate the deployment of next-generation networks using advanced technologies like LTE.
The FCC ignores the overall competitiveness of the U.S. wireless industry in its latest wireless competition report, published by the agency Thursday (see 1412180058), Mobile Future Chairman Jonathan Spalter said Friday in a blog post. Since 2010 and the first wireless competition report of the Obama presidency, the FCC has repeatedly declined to find that the wireless industry is effectively competitive. “Unfortunately, in the past few years, the Commission has not seemed mindful of this competitive reality, including in its most recent wireless competition report published yesterday,” Spalter said. “This is a shame, for by ignoring this reality -- and the underlying facts and data supporting it -- the Commission risks calling into question the even-handedness and validity of the its evaluative process.” Competitive Carriers Association President Steve Berry said the report confirms “continued consolidation in the wireless marketplace by the two dominant carriers,” AT&T and Verizon.
The AWS-3 auction hit $44.4 billion in provisionally winning bids at the end of bidding Friday, after 123 rounds. Licenses in the three largest U.S. cities -- New York, Los Angeles and Chicago -- are going for an estimated price of $4.29 per MHz/POP, or 94 percent above the average price for the auction, Wells Fargo said Friday in a note to investors. “We note the bidding in these key markets has slowed in terms of activity,” Wells Fargo said. “For example, in NYC, there has been no bidding since round number 64.” The company predicted the auction will close in late January.