TalkTalk leave Vodafone and join O2
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TalkTalk are to leave Vodafone and join O2 to provide their MVNO. TalkTalk will offer 4G through O2 but there seems to be a bigger game plan looming.
Which makes interesting given recent goings on with BT!
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/mediatechnologyandtelecoms/telecoms/11235094/TalkTalk-signs-deal-to-access-Telefonica-UKs-4G-service.html
Although TalkTalk will initially act only as a reseller, in time it plans to augment it network by distributing new home routers to its 4.2 million broadband customers that will also function as small mobile masts. By routing calls and data via the new equipment, over its own small slice of 4G radio spectrum, it will aim to reduce its payments to O2.
Baroness Harding said TalkTalk was some years away from implementing the plan, however. BT is working on similar technology on a more ambitious scale. It aims to begin exploiting its 4G radio spectrum a year after the scheduled launch of its consumer network next spring.
Both companies are aiming to undercut traditional mobile networks and build their base of ‘quad-play’ subscribers, who pay for a bundle of broadband, home phone, mobile and television services.
Which makes interesting given recent goings on with BT!
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/mediatechnologyandtelecoms/telecoms/11235094/TalkTalk-signs-deal-to-access-Telefonica-UKs-4G-service.html
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Is that just poorly written? What 4G radio spectrum does TalkTalk own?
http://forums.digitalspy.co.uk/showthread.php?p=75663882&highlight=#post75663882
Yes its not very well written but here is the missing piece of the puzzle which refers to Femtocells on 1800MHz.
http://recombu.com/digital/news/talktalk-router-wifi-ac-4g-femtocells-box-free-tv_M12675.html
It's just 1800. As I mentioned above it's low power concurrent 1800MHz which quite a few companies have licences for including BT who've started using it recently for 2G One Phone calls. If you do a network search in Tesco you'll also find it (will probably show Cable & Wireless).
Here's a list of licence holders (Opal is Talktalk and C&W is now Vodafone).
http://licensing.ofcom.org.uk/radiocommunication-licences/mobile-wireless-broadband/cellular-wireless-broadband/policy-and-background/licensee-freq-tech-information/concurrent-spectrum-access/
Oh, was this the 2G 1800MHz low power spectrum? Did TalkTalk inherit it from Opal? I hadn't realised it was licensed for 4G.
Edit
Thanks japaul, I see you've answered while I was in the process of writing an answer.
Sorry I've edited it now opps
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/11/24/bt_telefonica_talks_o2/
Good job I quoted you then ;-)
I don't think it would change anything. Not sure I follow what you are asking. O2 and TalkTalk have already signed their deal. Whoever owns O2 doesn't change that.
Ofcom these days take a technology neutral point of view so they can use 2G, 3G or 4G plus 5G in the future.
All 12 companies have the same shared spectrum 1781.7 – 1785.0 MHz & 1876.7 – 1880.0 MHz
From the Ofcom list BT in effect now have 2 of these licences. If they buy O2 they'll have 3. Scratching my head wondering whether there's any point in having more than one.
True, but O2 is only slightly better.
but they will get access to O2's 4G network too which is pretty good. Something Vodafone hasn't allowed.
Really depends on where you live.
At my parents house for example, the only network you can get signal on is Vodafone. So if they were TalkTalk customers (they aren't, they are on Vodafone) they would be very annoyed! Wonder if TalkTalk will be letting customers finish their contracts early because of this?
The point was would BT be willing to share their network with someone else if they brought O2
I know they would have to for awhile but would they give tt notice to quit after the contract run out
when BT owned O2 before they never had anyone else sharing their network with any other mobile operator afaik.
Oh I see. It was just the way it was worded seemed like you thought the O2/TalkTalk deal hadn't been done yet.
I don't think you can read much into BT's history in allowing MVNOs as when they exited in 2001 there wasn't much in the way of MVNOs except Virgin. However you might be on to something in respect of hampering TT's quadplay efforts in the future given they are a rival in the quadplay space. I guess it's something that would be looked at before any deal gets clearance.