AT&T, a leading telecom operator in the US, has revealed the latest progress on the Project AirGig that will use the power grid to deliver broadband internet.
“We think Project AirGig and 5G have a lot of natural synergies, and we plan to test 5G paired with AirGig in the future.
AT&T is yet to announce a date for the commercial deployment of AirGig. AT&T said it will expand field trials with technology supplier with a goal of eventually making gigabit-speed internet as widespread as electricity.
“We’ve applied for more than 500 patents for AirGig and conducted field trials both in and outside the United States,” Andre Fuetsch, president, AT&T Labs and Chief Technology Offer, said.
AT&T last year launched a trial of Project AirGig technology in Georgia with Georgia Power and provided a fixed wireless application to participating homes. It used a combination of mmWave and LTE spectrum.
AT&T used plastic antenna prototypes installed along the utility poles and observed no degradation of the mmWave signals during rain and other weather events.
AT&T provided a system which delivered hundreds of megabits per second to a number of residential locations in a rural part of the state.
AT&T said trial participants used easy-to-install receiver equipment, which allowed them to access high speed internet within 10 minutes.