That’s even faster than what you’d get out of mmWave 5G, which is more heavily touted by Verizon and AT&T as also being capable of extremely high speeds — Ookla recently reported download speeds of up to 1.6Gbps in the US.
However, it has limited range and device support and is easily hampered by common impediments like trees and buildings.
The four channels T-Mobile is using include repurposed 1,900MHz spectrum from T-Mobile’s and Sprint’s previously mothballed 3G networks, along with two 2.5GHz channels (or carriers) and 600MHz.
The rollout is already live in parts of T-Mobile’s network and “will be available nationwide in the coming weeks,” per the company’s release, although you’ll have to guess exactly where that is since T-Mobile isn’t saying.
Senior communications manager Justin Paulsen told The Verge in an email that no specific plan is required to take advantage of the aggregated channels, and there are no limitations on connection speed.
However, not everyone will be able to use the faster connection yet — you’ll need a Samsung Galaxy S23, which has the same Qualcomm Snapdragon X70 modem found in the OnePlus 11 5G.

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