WELCOME
to the house of Harry Plopper
"We're focused on the same thing we've done with 4G
"We're focused on the same thing we've done with 4G and 4G now," Chan said. "We're trying to make sure that we don't overdo 3G."
What's more, he said, the company doesn't plan to go after the smaller players that provide the most customers with the technology or broadband in their home, and it's a way to help those "smaller guys" make more money.
"We're taking the best technology out of the 4G ecosystem," Chan said. "That's our goal. That's why we are bringing 5G home."
The 5G home Internet deployment is already a success, but those cities are not big enough to compete with Comcast and Charter. The three companies have already brought 5G-equipped homes to a small market in Texas and California.
The company has said it would begin deploying its 5G home Internet service in Kansas City and Houston in the next few weeks, and that it will bring home 2 gigabit speeds across two of the country's busiest U.S. markets.
The 5G Home Wireless service is part of a broader push by Comcast to get more broadband customers to purchase its service, according to an investor study conducted by the American Association of Broadcasters. Verizon's 5G service comes in three versions: 5G, 5G+ in cities in the Pacific Northwest, and 5G+ in the Pacific Northwest. Comcast has said it will continue to roll out 5G+ in the San Francisco Bay Area and in New Jersey and New York City.
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