Verizon enables 5G in Los Angeles as part of 30+ city rollout

Shawn Knight

Posts: 15,291   +192
Staff member
Bottom line: 5G networks like those based on the technology Verizon is utilizing are cropping up on a regular basis from multiple providers but are limited to densely populated areas where people regularly converge en masse. While this technically works in large, open areas like near arenas and parks, it’s not a viable solution for nationwide 5G coverage. The range is just too low and the signal is too easily blocked by, well, virtually anything.

Verizon is one step closer to realizing its goal of having 5G service available in more than 30 US cities by the end of the year.

On Monday, the nation’s largest wireless provider said it has flipped the 5G switch in Los Angeles, California. Now, you’ll be able to tap into Verizon’s speedy network in select areas of the city around landmarks like Union Station, LA Live, the Staples Center, the Venice Beach Boardwalk, Grand Park and the Los Angeles Convention Center.

Other cities in line to get 5G before 2020 include Little Rock, Memphis, Salt Lake City, Charlotte, Cincinnati, Columbus, Cleveland and Des Moines. It has already launched in major metropolitan regions such as Boston, Houston, Chicago, Atlanta, Washington DC, Phoenix and New York Cities, just to name a few.

Nevertheless, it’s progress, and if you’ve got a 5G-enabled handset and happen to live in the Los Angeles area, it’s a good day for you.

Masthead credit: Hollywood Boulevard by Sean Pavone. Phones by Karlis Dambrans.

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Won't be long before we start seeing a bunch of YouTube video's pop up on this, but beware that Verizon has been caught before paying off people to post this pro-Verizon crap ..... looks like they are already loading it up .....
 
Personally think 5g is useless and unnecessary.
4G would be enough if rolled out covering the globe properly.
 
They really picked the wrong frequency for 5G. WiFi gets better coverage than that. At any rate, the more people off of the 3G/4G/LTE tri-tandem spectrums, the better those speeds will be.
 
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