Rogers Wireless
Rogers Wireless, previously known as Rogers AT&T Wireless, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Rogers Communications. Rogers Wireless is the largest Canadian wireless communications service provider.They offer the following services:
*
AMPS on the 800 MHz 'A' band
*
IS-136 (aka
TDMA) on the 800 MHz band.
*
GSM/
GPRS/
EDGE on the 850 and 1900 MHz bands
*
Mobitex/GSM/GPRS/EDGE
BlackBerries*Wireless Data Services
*
Two way messaging*
Planned: UMTS/
HSDPA (3G/3.5G) network, operational in the Fall of 2006.
|
Rogers AT&T logo when Rogers' wireless division was in partnership with AT&T |
Rogers began with an
AMPS network, and later moved to the IS-136 standard before finally moving to a GSM network in the 1990s. At various times the service was sold under the names Cantel, Cantel AT&T, Rogers Cantel AT&T, and Rogers AT&T Wireless. Their network still allows service on older standards but development is now focused entirely on
GSM service.
Some facts about Rogers:*6.2 million subscribers
*Covers 94% of the Canadian population
*Largest Canadian
BlackBerry service provider
*Offers Prepaid and monthly billing options
*Posted 2005
ARPU of $63.56 for monthly accounts
*Employs 5,000 full time employees
Rogers Wireless carries phones made by
Nokia,
Motorola,
Samsung,
Siemens AG,
LG,
Sony Ericsson, and
Panasonic. Rogers now focuses primarily on their GSM/GPRS/
EDGE network, and has for the past 2 years. Rogers Wireless claims to be the only Canadian Wireless Provider to offer a complete, independent coast-to-coast network spanning all Canadian regions excluding the Territories.
Rogers purchased
Fido in November
2004, creating Canada's largest wireless carrier, which surpasses
Bell Mobility in subscriber volume, and it is Canada's only GSM Network. Rogers began to integrate the two networks starting in early
2005.
In February 2006 at the 3GSM Conference in Barcelona, Rogers announced that testing for their 3G/3.5G UMTS/HSDPA network would be complete by March, with a planned public rollout in the Fall of 2006.
Reports from
The Globe and Mail in December
2005 have linked the use of stolen phones from
Rogers Communications Executives (including Rogers' boss
Edward Samuel Rogers) and other clients by terror organizations linked to
Hezbollah.
Employee sources have cited that the issue of executive cellphones being cloned dates from 1998 and has long since been closed.
*
Rogers Wireless*
Rogers Main Corporate Website