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AT&T to add Wi-Fi to mobile networks

By | July 19, 2012, 10:39 AM PDT

At the annual Fortune Brainstorm Tech conference in Aspen, AT&T executive Andy Geisse reportedly stated that Wi-Fi will soon be integrated with mobile carrier networks. The theory is that wireless carriers could switch users back and forth between mobile and Wi-Fi signals to relieve network congestion and keep customers connected. Operators have been talking about Wi-Fi offload for years now, but Geisse’s statement goes a step further by suggesting that carriers are working on making seamless network handoffs a reality in the not-to-distant future.

It’s already standard practice for smartphones to switch to a mobile broadband network when Wi-Fi isn’t available. However, the switch isn’t seamless. In the moment when the phone disconnects from Wi-Fi and then picks up a mobile signal, there’s a hiccup or interruption in phone activity. Right now that means you lose access to your streaming music service, or your web browser refuses to load a new page until the connection is re-established. When mobile carriers move to IP-based phone calls, however, that would mean dropping a call while your phone tries to pick up a new signal.

On the Wi-Fi side, we’ve already heard about work being done to allow roaming between different wireless networks. But according to the Wi-Fi Network Alliance, the new Passpoint standard for Wi-Fi roaming isn’t at a level where it could pass off a phone call between networks without interruption. Geisse, on the other hand, is saying that with Wi-Fi integrated into mobile carrier services, consumers won’t even be able to tell when a regular voice call becomes a voice-over-IP call using a Wi-Fi network.

Mobile carriers are certainly anxious to supplement their networks with Wi-Fi, but whether they’ve solved the latency issues involved in switching between Wi-Fi and cellular services remains to be seen. There’s also the business issue of how mobile carriers make money from Wi-Fi. Cable operators haven’t ruled out future usage-based billing for Wi-Fi access. You can bet traditional mobile operators haven’t either.

Image credit: AT&T

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Mari Silbey

About Mari Silbey

Mari Silbey is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Mari Silbey

Mari Silbey

Contributing Editor

Mari Silbey is an independent tech writer based in Washington, D.C. With a background in cable and telecom, she's a contributor to several trade publications, and part of the GigaOM analyst network. She also writes for the long-running digital media blog Zatz Not Funny, and has written for both corporate and association clients focused on broadband networks, mobile apps, and video delivery. She's a graduate of Duke University.

Follow her on Twitter.

Mari Silbey

Mari Silbey

Mari Silbey does not hold any investments in the technology companies she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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