Providers of cellular wireless and wireline connectivity have seen overall increases in demand - with a larger increase for wireline services than cellular wireless services - due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the numerous governmental orders to work from home and stay at home.
The difference between demand for wireline services and demand for cellular wireless services becomes clear after a brief explanation about wireline and cellular wireless services.
- Wireline service is provided to most homes and office buildings via fiber optic and similar telecom cables. The data transferred via these cables includes internet, phone and television. Many computers and televisions plug directly into the wired data through the fiber optic and other cables. Wireless routers then convert the wireline services into Wi-Fi. Most users of cell phone and other devices that are cellular data enabled will still connect to their home or office Wi-Fi in order to save from using cellular data when at home or in the office.
- Cellular wireless service is the data that transfers wirelessly using antennas from locations outside of homes and offices - both macro and small cell antennas. Typical use of cellular wireless services happens when users are out of range of Wi-Fi - for example, whenever users are traveling, shopping or at restaurants (unless, of course, the store or restaurant provides free Wi-Fi to its customers, which is becoming commonplace in many areas).
With the stay-at-home orders currently in place, much of the population is spending most of their time in their homes - where they likely have Wi-Fi connectivity - and spending less time traveling, in stores or restaurants. Therefore, providers are seeing a larger increase in wireline services than the increase in demand for cellular wireless services.
The changes in demand for connectivity were extreme and sudden, given the short period of time between the beginning of the pandemic and the stay-at-home/work-from-home orders. The demand has stabilized and remained mostly consistent since the initial jump in demand. Verizon has reported, “while data usage remains at elevated levels, the changes in how people are using the network has stabilized. Peak data usage ... shows small week to week changes, though peak usage numbers remain high compared to typical pre-COVID-19 levels.”
Originally published
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