The Denver Post

DENVER’S MOBILE SPEEDS GET BETTER

- By Tamara Chuang

When it comes to mobile speeds, Denver is 108th out of the 125 most-populated markets in the latest RootMetric­s report. While that doesn’t sound great, the city had been dead last.

Good news, Denver! We’re no longer in last place for mobile speeds. Then again, we’re still in the bottom 20 of the 125 most populated U.S. markets.

Researcher RootMetric­s, which released its mobile report Thursday, said Denver moved from last place to 108th in data speeds — a sign that companies have invested in their Denver mobile networks, said Annette Hamilton, RootMetric­s’ director.

“Denver jumped 17 places overall — that’s huge. The fact that Denver improved in four of the five categories is not something we’ve seen before,” said Hamilton, whose independen­t research company sends drivers out nationwide to individual­ly test indoor and outdoor cellular reception and data speeds of the four major mobile services. “I don’t know specifical­ly what has happened, but clearly something has happened for the area to improve so much.”

While 108th place is nothing to brag about, Denver fared better than Austin, Texas, ranked 110th; Las Vegas, 101st; and Indio, Calif., 125th. Colorado Springs ranked 100th. Factors that hurt an region’s mobile quality are typically population growth and lack of investment, she said.

Denver’s mediocre mobile-service quality has been blamed on the mountains, population growth and limited wireless spectrum. But it’s also incumbent on the mobile companies to keep up with investment­s. And that could be why Denver ranked higher.

In the first half of 2017, Denver saw an improvemen­t in data speeds from all four major carriers from the prior year.

Sprint, in particular, has been investing in its network in Denver, which included ripping out the old network and replacing it with new equipment. That helped the company earn RootMetric­s’ award for the fastest mobile service in town for the first half of 2017. Sprint’s mobile data speeds had doubled to a median download speed of 19.6 megabits per second, compared with last year’s 9.81 mbps.

T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon all saw faster speeds in Denver, nearly doubling their year-ago data speeds. Verizon was the slowest, at 11.7 mbps.

And we could see even more improvemen­ts in RootMetric’s next report. In May, Sprint said it is continuing to improve quality and speed in Denver, thanks to a feature called the Magic Box. AT&T said it invested $100 million in the Denver metro area, which included upgraded LTE capacity at Coors Field and the Pepsi Center.

Lansing, Mich., Chicago and At-

lanta took the top three spots in RootMetric’s rankings. In those regions, median data speeds were at least 20 mbps, with T-Mobile clocking in at a zippy 48.9 mbps in Lansing.

“I think there’s an ongoing improvemen­t (by the carriers),” Hamilton said. “They look at how people are putting demands on the network, whether they’re making more data demands or call demands, and then they optimize for those things.”

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