Product Releases
NEW
YORK (AP) — For the first time, AT&T is selling small, portable
cellular antennas that will allow corporate and government customers to
provide their own wireless coverage in remote or disaster-struck areas.
Usually,
cellphone companies have to restore service after disasters like
hurricanes by sending in their own trucks that act like mobile cell
towers. But AT&T's new product would let first responders such as
police and emergency workers immediately control where they have
coverage.
One
of AT&T's options is a unit that packs into a suitcase, with a
satellite dish carried separately. The unit requires outside power, such
as a generator, to work.
The
Remote Mobility Zone can handle 14 simultaneous calls, and data at
less-than-broadband speeds. Coverage extends up to half a mile from the
unit. The "portable cell tower" can also be mounted in a car or truck.
The
Remote Mobility Zone's satellite dish makes it independent of broadband
service. AT&T also sells smartphones that can talk directly to
satellites. The Remote Mobility Zone would be able to be used with any
AT&T phone.
The cost of the units will range from $15,000 to $45,000, AT&T said Monday, plus some monthly fees.
Like
other carriers, AT&T also sells "femtocells," even smaller cellular
antennas that users can place indoors. Connected to broadband service,
they provide added coverage inside a home.
SOURCE: The Associated Press

