The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Verizon names 2 cities for 5G debuts

Minneapoli­s, Chicago to be first of carrier’s 30 planned 5G cities by ’20.

- By Scott Moritz

Verizon Communicat­ions Inc. aims to be the first U.S. carrier out of the gate to offer mobile 5G service, naming two cities — Chicago and Minneapoli­s — for an initial launch next month of the advanced cellular technology.

In a glimpse of how the industry may structure pricing for its newest service, Verizon’s existing customers with unlimited data plans can add 5G service for $10 more a month, according to a statement.

Verizon sidesteppe­d one of the main challenges to 5G introducti­on — the absence of 5G phones — by offering an adaptation. Starting today, the company is taking orders for a $50 snap-on module for the Motorola Z3 phone, making it the only phone that will be enabled for the advanced service by the April 11 launch date.

The Midwestern metropolis­es are part of a Verizon roster meant to include 30 markets by year-end.

The rush to the market underscore­s the eagerness of the carriers to sign up early adopters of the next-generation wireless technology. The race has had some awkward steps. In addition to Verizon’s accessory-driven approach, AT&T Inc. is calling its upgraded 4G service “5G E.” Sprint Corp. immediatel­y challenged that in court, calling it fake and deceptive.

Last month, Sprint appeared to lead the pack by announcing it would start the first 5G service in May. The company said four initial cities — Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas and Kansas City — would have the service, followed by Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Phoenix and Washington, D.C. Sprint said it would have 5G phones from LG Corp. and Samsung Electronic­s Co. available for the launch.

The chase for customers has also been seen from some angles as a battle for global supremacy. President Donald Trump has viewed 5G expansion as a key technology arms race with China.

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