The ‘Race to 5G’ Wound Up Being More Of A Hobbled Waddle To Nowhere
from the holy-hype,-batman dept
We’ve noted for years how the “race to 5G” was largely just hype by telecoms and hardware vendors eager to sell more gear and justify high U.S. mobile data prices. While 5G does provide faster, more resilient, and lower latency networks, it’s more of a modest evolution than a revolution.
But that’s not what telecom giants like Verizon, T-Mobile, and AT&T promised. All three routinely promised that 5G would change the way we live and work, usher forth the smart cities of tomorrow, and even revolutionize the way we treat cancer. None of those things wound up being true.
In fact, when 5G did arrive in the U.S., speeds and performance wound up being significantly worse than in many overseas deployments. At prices far higher than in most developed countries.
As a result, many consumers wound up associating the standard not with progress, but with empty hype. And as The Verge notes in a new piece tracking 5G’s trajectory to date, investors are growing increasingly unhappy about the lack of returns on what was a major overall investment:
“And we don’t have to guess whether investors are asking questions about when they’ll see a return — they asked point blank in the company’s most recent earnings call. [Verizon] CEO Hans Vestberg fielded the question, balancing the phrases “having the right offers for our customers” and “generating the bottom line for ourselves,” while nodding to “price adjustments” that also “included new value” for customers. It was a show of verbal gymnastics that meant precisely nothing.”
There’s one area where 5G did wind up being a benefit: fixed wireless access (FWA). For folks stuck without any access, or stuck on a DSL line straight out of 2003, a home 5G FWA line is a notable improvement. It’s still not something that’s going to be as fast and reliable as fiber (or even cable), but 5G has proven to be useful when it comes to shoring up overall home broadband coverage gaps.
But unchecked and often pointless industry consolidation continues to reduce any incentive to seriously compete on price over the longer term. And as investor demand for recouped investment grows, the outcome will most assuredly be more nickel-and-diming of wireless customers. Customers on good FWA deals now will, as is wireless industry tradition, steadily see costs head skyward over time.
Meanwhile in China (the country held up as the standard we were supposedly chasing in the “race to 5G”) consumers see much, much cheaper prices for 5G connections — but also still resent being shoveled over to 5G due to the technology’s high battery drain and spotty coverage in rural markets.
All told, U.S. 5G is a far cry from the “fourth industrial revolution” telecoms and gear vendors tried desperately to present it as, and all most consumers really wanted was a reliable, more affordable connection.
Filed Under: 4g, 5g, bandwidth, broadband, competition, hype, race to 5g, telecom




Comments on “The ‘Race to 5G’ Wound Up Being More Of A Hobbled Waddle To Nowhere”
I’ve disabled 5G on my phone because it ends draining my battery significantly faster. I get maybe an additional 4 to 5 hours with it turned off.
Re:
Same, although on my Google Fi Pixel phone I had to bit into safe mode to do so. They really didn’t want me to turn it off.
See, I’d think that all these “tough on China” people here in the US would be quite concerned that China’s 5G and other internet stuff is more affordable than in the US. Strange how they aren’t flipping out about that…. I mean, if China is our ultimate rival, surely it makes sense to try to make our internet better in all ways than theirs?
Re:
Like a lot of services (healthcare, subscriptions, insurance, etc.), they want you to pay for it, but they don’t want you to actually use it.
Re: it's not just China
The US has terrible internet service (speed, price) compared with much of the world because the FCC is a toothless lapdog that serves its telecom masters instead of the American people.
Here’s what 5G did for me: I threatened Comcast that I would switch to T-Mobile 5G and they chopped my bill almost in half. Total bluff, I can’t even get T-Mobile at my house and I don’t think I’d trust it for WMH over broadband cable anyway.
The real problem is that I had to bluff Comcast to get the price that I should be getting because internet access is a regulated utility and Comcast can’t raise prices without getting the approval of the PUC. Wouldn’t that be nice.
Re: Re:
It’s very convenient for the actual telecom lapdogs in Congress that you’ve chosen to blame the FCC. The FCC gets its tepid power (and its lack of staffing) from Congress. Therefore, any FCC failure is actually a failure of Congress.
You’re mad at the wrong people.
Re: Re: Re:
Try being a lorry driver, living in the vehicle for days at a time or longer. A tablet with 5G, or a laptop with 5g will be you Internet connection for work and play.
I never understood the need for large bandwidth into a device I can hold in my hand. I think they’re still trying to figure out how to stop 5G from being a battery killer. So, I always thought that was hype.
You know what I don’t think is hype? Generative AI.
One of the best headlines ever!
The ‘Race to 5G’ Wound Up Being More Of A Hobbled Waddle To Nowhere
I’m sure 5G would’ve made a much larger impact if they had not included it in the vaccine.
Re:
Yeah, everyone got it in the cost of the vaccine, but they still want you to pay for damn subscription to enable it!
Re: Re:
I have been trying to connect to the wifi ever since getting the shot, it does not work.
The Basic Problem...
The basic problem is – “good enough”. In most situations, we’ve hit the level of performance necessary. It’s been a long time since I’ve seen buffering problems, at home on wifi or on nG (for n=1..5). Same reason that except for some serious datacenter applications, there’s no need to upgrade from 1Gig Ethernet. If streaming video at full resolution of your device can keep up easily, why do you need faster? If you can load pretty much any file in seconds, does it matter? So you download a new install of MS Office in 3 seconds instead of 10 – it will still take a minute or five to install.
Re:
But what about everyone doing telesurgery over their phone from the dog park?
Ironically, my 5G is less reliable than the 4G LTE, so I waste battery on a worse connection. WTH?
As someone who invests in the market I can see where the investor side can impact business strategies, but we’re seeing the downside of unfettered capitalism. There should be a stronger balance between product growth and a never ending expectation of higher returns on shares.
We see it time and time again these days. Companies start out great, they go public, and greed forces them to turn into absolute crap.
Those that have 5G access disagree with you. T-Mobile constantly sets new speed achievements in multiple urban areas around the country. They do not charge extra for 5G service compared to 4G.
5G exceeds 400Mbps where it is available. The leap in technology is instantly noticeable where available. I suggest you try it out before you knock it.
Re:
I’ve tried it. It’s not much different in terms of what I am capable of perceiving. If anything, I get better results when it is turned off than turned on, thanks to 5G’s spottier coverage and higher battery consumption. It’s just not worth it for me, personally.
No one’s saying there isn’t some improvement, by the way; what you described, though, was an incremental improvement.
The disaster of an early slow rollout
5G has two major problems:
First was non-standalone mode (NSA) where it provides occasional boosts to LTE. On the technology side it’s slow, eats battery, and makes connections less reliable. There was also no limit to how crappy an NSA phone or NSA telco could be since it had to only be capable of maybe boosting LTE sometimes in some conditions. Premium 5G phones costing $1500 can light up their “5G” icon even though they have absolutely no ability to use the 5G signal they see. Telcos can brag about gigabit 5G even though it’s NSA that’s laggy and unreliable.
The second problem was that 5G was bloated with features and marketing it didn’t need up-front. People wanted spectrum efficiency. 5G marketing promised AI, robot cars, and magic that defies the laws of physics. Warp-speed mmWave for everyone (within line-of-sight)! Set unrealistic expectations that can’t be delivered.
5G would have done better if it went straight to stand-alone mode and skipped all the hype. People would get moderately better performance and be happy.
Re:
I don’t know about the advertising aspects of it, but I don’t is usually read consumer aimed magazines. I’ve always seen a focus on speed and speed is exactly what I get. Topping 300Mbps regularly.
Any other promises, whatever. Those that have access to the MMW speeds are able to see the hype is founded.
It takes time and money to install new antennas. Keep in mind how long it took to get cell phone coverage in the first place. There are still gaps in the US system.