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  2. 3GPP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3GPP

    The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) is an umbrella term for a number of standards organizations which develop protocols for mobile telecommunications. Its best known work is the development and maintenance of: [1] GSM and related 2G and 2.5G standards, including GPRS and EDGE; UMTS and related 3G standards, including HSPA and HSPA+

  3. LTE frequency bands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LTE_frequency_bands

    From Tables 5.5-1 "E-UTRA Operating Bands" and 5.6.1-1 "E-UTRA Channel Bandwidth" of the latest published version of the 3GPP TS 36.101, [1] the following table lists the specified frequency bands of LTE and the channel bandwidths each band supports.

  4. Cell Broadcast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_Broadcast

    Cell Broadcast messaging was first demonstrated in Paris in 1997. Some mobile operators used Cell Broadcast for communicating the area code of the antenna cell to the mobile user (via channel 050), [5] for nationwide or citywide alerting, weather reports, mass messaging, location-based news, etc. Cell broadcast has been widely deployed since 2008 by major Asian, US, Canadian, South American ...

  5. GSM frequency bands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GSM_frequency_bands

    Further GSM-850 is also sometimes called GSM-800 because this frequency range was known as the "800 MHz band" (for simplification) when it was first allocated for AMPS in the United States in 1983. In North America GSM-1900 is also referred to as Personal Communications Service (PCS) like any other cellular system operating on the "1900 MHz band".

  6. Cellular frequencies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellular_frequencies

    They had to develop their existing networks and eventually introduce new standards, often based on other frequencies. Some European countries (and Japan) adopted TACS operating in 900 MHz. The GSM standard, which appeared in Europe to replace NMT-450 and other standards, initially used the 900 MHz band too. As demand grew, carriers acquired ...

  7. LTE-M - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LTE-M

    LTE-M or LTE-MTC ("Long-Term Evolution Machine Type Communication") is a type of low-power wide-area network radio communication technology standard developed by 3GPP for machine-to-machine and Internet of Things (IoT) applications.

  8. Asia-Pacific Telecommunity band plan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asia-Pacific_Telecommunity...

    Table 1. 3GPP standard bands for the APT segmentation of the 600 and 700 MHz bands [2]. Allocation of the 700 MHz band (that in many parts of the world is commonly referred to as the Digital Dividend) to mobile communications it is one of the key solutions for meeting the mobile data explosion [5] challenge faced by the telecommunications industry and telecommunications regulators seeking ...

  9. Multimedia Broadcast Multicast Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multimedia_Broadcast...

    eMBMS has been standardized in various groups of 3GPP as part of LTE release 9. The LTE version of MBMS, referred to as Multicast-broadcast single-frequency network (MBSFN), supports broadcast only services and is based on a Single Frequency Network (SFN) based OFDM waveform and so is functional similar to other broadcast solutions such as DVB ...