- 3G - Wikipedia
Several telecommunications companies marketed wireless mobile Internet services as 3G, indicating that the advertised service was provided over a 3G wireless network However, 3G services have largely been supplanted in marketing by 4G and 5G services in most areas of the world
- What is 3G? - T-Mobile
What is 3G? 3G is the third generation of wireless technology in a long-line of mobile network standards (1G, 2G, 3G, 4G and 5G)
- 3G: The Third Generation of Wireless Technology
3G stands for 3rd generation The primary goal of 3G wireless communication is to provide relatively high-speed wireless connectivity This encompasses multimedia, data, and video applications, in addition to traditional voice services
- 3GPP - Wikipedia
The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) is an umbrella term for a number of standards organizations which develop protocols for mobile telecommunications Its best known work is the development and maintenance of: [1] GSM and related 2G, 2 5G, and 2 75G standards, including GPRS and EDGE UMTS and related 3G standards, including HSPA and HSPA+ LTE and related 4G standards, including LTE
- What is 3G (third generation of mobile telephony)? - TechTarget
3G refers to the third generation of cellular technology that enables mobile telephony The third-generation standard follows two earlier generations that were deployed on mobile networks and across mobile phones
- 3G Network Shutdown: Impact, Dates What To Do
Get up to speed on the upcoming 3G network shutdown and its impacts on your mobile service Learn why 3G is being phased out and the role mobile network operators are taking in the 3G switch off process as they transition to improved 4G and 5G networks
- What is 3G? Third Generation Mobile Explained | Wireless Logic
3G refers to the third generation of mobile technology Compared to their 2G predecessors, 3G networks offered significantly higher data rates and bandwidths, primarily to meet the needs of the burgeoning smartphone market
- Is 3G Still a Thing? - How-To Geek
However, 3G can no longer meet our demands, as the bandwidth necessary to use modern apps has grown significantly To put things into perspective, 5G can handle a theoretical 10Gbps, 4G can do 100Mbps, and 3G is limited to just 3Mbps
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