Britain's first fourth generation (4G) mobile service was launched in 11 cities Tuesday by the operator EEE. EE,
a company formally known as Everything Everywhere, said the 4G service
went live in Bristol, Birmingham, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds,
Liverpool, London, Manchester, Sheffield and Southampton, reported
Xinhua.
The price is diversified in different plans -- 500MB of
data would be charged 36 pounds ($58) a month, while more elaborate
plans would cost 56 pounds per month with a data allowance of 8GB.
"Today
is a landmark day for our company, the UK mobile industry and, most
importantly, the country's business and consumers," said Olaf Swantee,
CEO of EE, in a statement.
Tuesday's launch is reportedly the
first phase of its 4G services. The network will expand by 2,000 square
miles every month, both into new cities as well as providing denser
coverage in existing areas.
4G technology can deliver internet
download speeds up to 10 times faster than 3G which helped bring the
internet to mobile phones a few years ago.
EE was granted
Britain's first 4G license in August by Ofcom, the regulator for British
communication industries. Its rival companies such as Vodafone and O2
are waiting for a spectrum auction scheduled for early next year to
launch their own 4G services in Britain.
Britain launches first 4G mobile service



