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Bell Canada Discontinued for new customers, but still active for current ones. Sprint Canada: Fido Rogers Wireless Had 31,000 customers in Q3 2005 before being acquired Petro-Canada Mobility Rogers Wireless Ztar Mobile: Discontinued, customers migrated to Good2Go Mobility Xplore Mobile: Bell Mobility: Xplore Inc.
Sprint Canada was a Canadian telecommunications service provider active from 1993 until 2005, when it was acquired by Rogers Communications. It offered both residential and business services, and was a key company in the long-distance wars of Canada. [ 1 ]
Apart from their main spectrum holdings across large regions in the country (listed below) the major US carriers (AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile & Verizon) also hold various Cellular Market Area (CMA) and/or Economic Area (EA) licenses for the AWS 1700 band, as well as Major Trading Area (MTA) and/or Basic Trading Area (BTA) licenses for the PCS 1900 band.
Former Rural Com; national coverage based on iPCS technology and Wi-Nodes [62] 302: 780: SaskTel: SaskTel Mobility: Operational: UMTS 850 / UMTS 1900 / LTE 600 / LTE 700 / LTE 850 / LTE 1900 / LTE 1700 / LTE 2600 / 5G 1700 / 5G 3500: Saskatchewan [2] [63] [64] 302: 781: SaskTel: SaskTel Mobility: Not operational: Unknown [58] MNC withdrawn [38 ...
While most of these Tier 1 providers offer global coverage (based on the published network map on their respective public websites), there are some which are restricted geographically. However these do offer global coverage for mobiles and IP-VPN type services which are unrelated to being a Tier 1 provider.
In 1998, Call-Net acquired long-distance service and data-circuit provider Fonorola of Montreal for about $1.8 billion and merged it into Sprint Canada. On May 11, 2005, Rogers Communications Inc. and Call-Net jointly announced that they entered into an agreement under which RCI would acquire 100% of Call-Net under a plan of arrangement ( [1] ).
LTE Max is available in a fraction of Rogers' LTE coverage area. [27] On April 17, 2014, Rogers launched LTE service on its 700 MHz spectrum. [42] Rogers has not announced its goals for expanding LTE coverage across Canada, but announced plans in June 2014 to have LTE coverage expanded to 98.3% of the population of British Columbia by the end ...
Sprint and Verizon Wireless had a reciprocal data roaming agreement [100] that allowed for the use of Sprint Power Vision content like TV, movie downloads, and stream radio in Verizon 1x and EVDO coverage areas. Sprint also had a reciprocal 1xRTT, EVDO and LTE data and voice roaming agreement with U.S. Cellular.