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Wikipedia

Sprint Corporation

Sprint Corporation was an American telecommunications company. Before it merged with T-Mobile US on April 1, 2020, it was the fourth-largest mobile network operator in the United States, serving 54.3 million customers as of June 30, 2019.[3] The company also offered wireless voice, messaging, and broadband services through its various subsidiaries under the Boost Mobile and Open Mobile brands and wholesale access to its wireless networks to mobile virtual network operators.

Sprint Corporation
Former Sprint World Headquarters Campus in Overland Park, Kansas, U.S.
FormerlyBrown Telephone Company (1899–1911)
United Telephone Company (1911–1925)
United Telephone and Electric (1925–1938)
United Utilities, Inc. (1938–1972)
United Telecommunications and United Telephone System (1972–1987)
Sprint Corporation (1987–2005, 2013–2020)
Sprint Nextel Corporation (2005–2013)
TypePublic
NYSE: S
IndustryTelecommunications
PredecessorsSPC
GTE Sprint
US Sprint
Embarq
Nextel Communications
FoundedDecember 21, 1899; 123 years ago (1899-12-21)[1]
FoundersCleyson Brown
Jacob Brown
DefunctApril 1, 2020; 2 years ago (2020-04-01) (as an independent company)
August 2, 2020; 2 years ago (2020-08-02) (official)
FateMerged into T-Mobile US
Headquarters,
U.S.
Area served
United States
ServicesMobile Telephony
Wireless communications
Internet services
Broadband
Revenue US$33.60 billion (2019)
US$398 million (2019)
US$1.94 billion (2019)
Total assets US$84.60 billion (2019)
Total equity US$26.07 billion (2019)
OwnerT-Mobile
Number of employees
28,500 (Q1 2019)
ParentT-Mobile US
Subsidiariesi-wireless, Open Mobile, SprintCom, Central Telephone, UbiquiTel
Website at the Wayback Machine (archived 2020-07-31)
Footnotes / references
[2]

In July 2013, a majority of the company was purchased by the Japanese telecommunications company SoftBank Group.[4] Sprint used CDMA, EvDO and 4G LTE networks, and formerly operated iDEN, WiMAX, and 5G NR networks. Sprint was incorporated in Kansas.[5]

Sprint traced its origins to the Brown Telephone Company, which was founded in 1899 to bring telephone service to the rural area around Abilene, Kansas. In 2006, Sprint left the local landline telephone business and spun those assets off into a new company named Embarq, which later became a part of Lumen Tech (formerly CenturyLink), which remains one of the largest long-distance providers in the United States.

Until 2005, the company was also known as the Sprint Corporation, but took the name Sprint Nextel Corporation when it merged with Nextel Communications and adopted its black and yellow color scheme, along with a new logo. In 2013, following the shutdown of the Nextel network and concurrent with the acquisition by SoftBank, the company resumed using the name Sprint Corporation. In July 2013, as part of the SoftBank transactions, Sprint acquired the remaining shares of the wireless broadband carrier Clearwire Corporation that it did not already own.

In August 2014, CEO Dan Hesse was replaced by Marcelo Claure.[6] In May 2018, Michel Combes replaced[7] Claure, and had been working to get Sprint's merger with its rival T-Mobile through regulatory proceedings.[8]

On April 1, 2020, Sprint Corporation completed their merger with T-Mobile US, which effectively made Sprint a subsidiary of T-Mobile until the Sprint brand officially discontinued in the beginning of August. Leadership, background, and stock changes happened immediately, with customer-side changes happening over time. The Sprint brand officially discontinued on August 2, 2020. Billing was already showing the T-Mobile brand, and on this date all retail, customer service, and all other company branding switched to the T-Mobile brand. New rate plans were also introduced as well for all new and existing customers from both companies, though all will be grandfathered into their current plan for at least 3 years should they choose not to switch to a new T-Mobile plan.[9][10][11][12][13]

History

Early years

The Sprint Corporation traces its origins to two companies, the Brown Telephone Company and Southern Pacific Railroad.[14]

Brown Telephone Company

Brown Telephone Company was founded in 1899 by Cleyson Brown, to deploy the first telephone service to the rural area around Abilene, Kansas.[15] The Browns installed their first long-distance circuit in 1900 and became an alternative to the Bell Telephone Company, the most popular telephone service at the time.[citation needed] In 1911, C. L. Brown consolidated the Brown Telephone Company with three other independents to form the United Telephone Company.[16] C. L. Brown formed United Telephone and Electric (UT&E) in 1925. In 1939, at the end of the Great Depression, UT&E reorganized to form United Utilities.[16]

 
United Telephone System logo, used from 1981 into the 1990s.

In 1964, Paul H. Henson became president of United Utilities; two years later, he was named chairman.[17] When Henson began working at the company in 1959, it had 575,000 telephones in 15 states and revenues of $65 million.[18][19][17] Henson is credited with creating the first major fiber optic network, having recognized it as a way to handle more calls and provide better quality sound.[17]

In 1972, United Utilities changed its name to United Telecommunications.[16] In 1980, United Telecommunications began working on a 23,000 mile fiber optic network for long-distance calls.[17] In 1989, this long-distance business became profitable for the company for the first time.[17] In 1990, Henson retired from United Telecommunications; by this time the company's revenues had grown to $8 billion.[17]

Southern Pacific Communications and introduction of Sprint

Sprint also traces its roots back to the Southern Pacific Railroad (SPR), which was founded in the 1860s as a subsidiary of the Southern Pacific Company (SPC). The company operated thousands of miles of track as well as telegraph wire that ran along those tracks. In the early 1970s, the company began looking for ways to use its existing communications lines for long-distance calling.[14] This division of the business was named the Southern Pacific Communications Company.[20] By the mid 1970s, SPC was beginning to take business away from AT&T, which held a monopoly at the time.[14] A number of lawsuits between SPC and AT&T took place throughout the 1970s; the majority were decided in favor of increased competition.[20] Prior attempts at offering long-distance voice services had not been approved by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC), although a fax service (called SpeedFAX) was permitted.[21]

In the mid-1970s, SPC held a contest to select a new name for the company.[22] The winning entry was "SPRINT", an acronym for Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Networking Telephony.[22]

Consolidation and renaming to Sprint Corporation

 
Sprint Corporation brand mark (1987–2005)

In 1982, it was announced that GTE Corp. had reached an agreement to buy SPC's long-distance telephone operation, including Sprint. The deal was later finalized in 1983.[23][24]

In 1986, GTE Sprint merged with the United Telecommunications Inc. property, US Telecom.[25] The joint venture was to be co-owned by GTE and United Telecom named US Sprint Communications.[25] The new entity also included communications firm GTE Telenet, and United Telecom Data communications Co., (formerly known as Uninet).[26] In 1988, GTE sold more of Sprint to United Telecom, giving United Telecom operational control of the company.[27] United Telecom announced it would complete its acquisition of US Sprint on April 18, 1990.[28]

United Telecom officially changed its name to Sprint Corporation in 1987 to capitalize on its brand recognition.[29]

Expansion to Canada

Sprint Corporation entered the Canadian market in the early 1990s as a reseller of bulk long-distance telephone lines that it bought from domestic companies. Under Canadian foreign ownership regulations, Sprint could not open its own network. In 1993, Sprint entered into a strategic alliance with Call-Net Enterprises, a Canadian long-distance service, and bought 25 percent of the company.[30] Call-Net's long-distance service was renamed "Sprint Canada", and expanded to include landline and internet services. In 2005, Call-Net and Sprint Canada's 600,000 customers were acquired by Rogers Communications.[31]

Return to wireless

In March 1993, Sprint merged with Chicago's Centel Corp. Centel remained in the Chicago area and was renamed Sprint Cellular Co.[32] In 1994, Sprint spun off their existing cellular operations as 360° Communications to comply with an FCC regulatory mandate.[33] In 1998, 360 Communications was acquired by Alltel,[34] which was in turn acquired by Verizon in 2009.[35]

In 1994, Sprint announces plans for a powerful new venture with three of the nation's major cable television companies, Tele-Communications Inc. (TCI), Comcast Corp. and Cox Cable. The four companies outline plans to build a nationwide network to provide wireless personal communications service (PCS), and also affirm their support for a single integrated offering of wireless, local telephone and long distance services in a package with cable television service[36]

In 1995, Sprint and its cable television associates entered into a partnership with American Personal Communications (APC) to create a digital wireless network.[37] In November 1995, the company began to offer wireless service under the Sprint Spectrum brand in the Baltimore-Washington metropolitan area.[37] This was the first commercial Personal Communications Service (PCS) network in the United States.[37] Although the Sprint PCS service was CDMA, the original Washington-area network used GSM.[37] Eventually, Sprint launched its new nationwide CDMA network,[37] then in 1999 sold the decommissioned GSM infrastructure to Omnipoint which re-launched in May 2000. Omnipoint was later acquired by VoiceStream Wireless,[38] which eventually became part of T-Mobile US. Sprint and T-Mobile US merged in 2020.

Partnerships and more consolidation

In September 1996, Sprint announced a deal with RadioShack, and in 1997, Sprint stores opened at RadioShack to offer communications services and products across the United States.[39]

On October 5, 1999, Sprint and MCI WorldCom announced a $129 billion merger agreement between the two companies.[40] The deal would have been the largest corporate merger in history at the time. However, due to pressure from the United States Department of Justice and the European Union on concerns of it creating a monopoly, the deal did not go through.[41]

In 1999, Sprint began recombining its local telecom, long-distance, wireline, and wireless business units into a new company, in an initiative known internally as "One Sprint". In April 2004, the separately traded wireless tracking stock PCS was absorbed into the New York Stock Exchange FON ticker symbol, Sprint's former ticker symbol (FON stood for "Fiber Optic Network", but was also a homophone of the word "phone").[42] This was challenged in many lawsuits by Sprint PCS shareholders who felt their stock was devalued because it was trading at the ratio of 1 share of PCS stock for 1/2 share of FON stock. The PCS shareholders claimed a loss of 1.3 billion to 3.4 billion dollars.[43]

Merger of Sprint Corporation and Nextel Communications

On December 15, 2004, Sprint Corporation and Nextel Communications announced they would merge to form Sprint Nextel Corporation.[44] The merger was transacted as a purchase of Nextel Communications by Sprint Corporation for tax reasons; Sprint purchased 50.1 percent of Nextel. At the time of the merger announcement, Sprint and Nextel were the third and fifth leading providers in the U.S. mobile phone industry, respectively.[45]

Sprint shareholders approved the merger on July 13, 2005.[46] The merger deal was approved by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and U.S. Department of Justice on August 3, 2005.[47] Sprint Nextel was formed on August 13, 2005, when the deal was completed.[48]

Sprint and Nextel faced opposition to the merger, mostly from regional affiliates that provided wireless services on behalf of the companies.[49] These regional affiliates felt that the new company would hinder competition.[49]

On September 1, 2005, Sprint Nextel combined plan offerings of its Sprint and Nextel brands to bring uniformity across the company's offerings.[citation needed]

Nextel has licensed its identity to NII Holdings, Inc., of which Sprint Nextel owned 18%. NII has used the Nextel brand to set up networks in many Latin American countries. Following Sprint's purchase of Nextel, Nextel sold all of its investment in NII Holdings.[citation needed]

The integration process was difficult due to disparate network technologies. Sprint tried to address this with the advent of PowerSource phones. These phones routed voice call and data services over Sprint's PCS spectrum while maintaining DirectConnect services over 800 MHz spectrum. However, this was not sufficient in coverage, due to the inability to roam on a non-PCS spectrum.[citation needed] Top Nextel Executives began leaving the company immediately after the merger closed. Tim Donahue, the Nextel CEO, stayed on as executive chairman, but ceded decision-making authority to Gary D. Forsee. Tom Kelly, COO of Nextel, took an interim staff position as Chief Strategy Officer. Two years after the merger, only a few key Nextel executives remained, with many former Nextel middle- and upper-level managers having left, citing reasons including the unbridgeable cultural difference between the two companies.[citation needed]

In 2006, Sprint spun off its local telephone operations, including the former United Telephone companies and Centel, as Embarq.[50]

Sprint's acquisition of Nextel was a disaster from a fiscal standpoint in 2008, the company wrote down $29.7 billion of the $36 billion sum it had paid for Nextel in 2005, wiping out 80 percent of the value of Nextel at the time it had been acquired.[51] The write down reflected the depreciation in Nextel's goodwill since the date of acquisition.[52]

Affiliate acquisitions and settlements

Prior to their merger, Sprint and Nextel were dependent on a network of affiliated companies. Following the announcement of the merger agreement, some of these affiliates came forward with strong opposition to the Sprint-Nextel merger on the grounds that the merged company might violate existing agreements or significantly undercut earnings to these affiliates. In order for Sprint Nextel to allay some of this opposition, they initiated discussions of either acquiring some of these affiliates or renegotiating existing agreements. In several cases, the newly formed company was forced to acquire affiliated companies in exchange for their dropping their opposition to the merger. Forsee said that the company would likely have to acquire all of its remaining affiliates.[citation needed]

In 2005, Sprint Nextel acquired three of its ten wireless affiliates: US Unwired, acquired in August; Gulf Coast Wireless, acquired in October; and IWO Holdings, acquired in October. Alamosa PCS, which Sprint Nextel acquired on February 2, 2006, was the largest of its affiliate carriers. Other acquired affiliates include Ubiquitel, iPCS, Enterprise, and Northern. In 2021, after merging with Sprint in 2020, T-Mobile acquired the remaining two of Sprint's original ten affiliates, Shentel[53] and Swiftel.[54]

Below are companies which Sprint Corporation has acquired:

  • August 13, 2005: Sprint acquires the Sprint PCS affiliate US Unwired for $1.3B, thus adding 500,000 additional direct customers to Sprint Nextel.[55]
  • August 30, 2005: Sprint Nextel announces its intention to acquire IWO Holdings, Inc., a mainly New England-based network affiliate for the Sprint PCS business.[56] The acquisition closed on October 20, 2005.[57]
  • Sprint Nextel acquires Gulf Coast Wireless, adding 95,000 customers, mainly in Louisiana and Mississippi, to Sprint Nextel's CDMA network. The acquisition closed on October 3, 2005.
  • November 21, 2005: Sprint Nextel announces a $4.3-billion acquisition agreement for Texas-based Sprint PCS affiliate Alamosa Holdings, potentially adding 1.48 million customers to Sprint Nextel.[58]
  • December 16, 2005: Sprint Nextel announces a $98 million agreement to acquire Enterprise Communications of Columbus, Georgia, thus adding over 52,000 customers to the company's PCS Wireless division.[59]
  • December 16, 2005: Sprint Nextel announces acquisition of non-affiliate Velocita Wireless. The transaction enhances the iDEN network's 900 MHz spectrum position.[60] On July 2, 2007, Velocita Wireless, which became an indirect subsidiary of Sprint Nextel, was acquired by United Wireless Holdings, Inc.[61]
  • December 21, 2005: Sprint Nextel Corporation and Nextel Partners, Inc. reach an agreement for a $6.5 billion deal whereby the Sprint Nextel Corporation acquires the largest of Nextel's affiliates to end Nextel Partners' opposition to any changes by Sprint in relation to the Sprint-Nextel merger. Once completed, the Nextel Partners deal adds more than 2 million customers directly to the Sprint Nextel company.[62]
  • April 20, 2006: Sprint Nextel Corporation and Ubiquitel PCS Corporation reach an agreement whereby the Sprint Nextel Corporation acquires Ubiquitelpcs, an exclusive Sprint PCS provider.[63]
  • March 17, 2007: Sprint Nextel Corporation completes integration of Nextel Partners customers into the Sprint Nextel system. Nextel Partners' Las Vegas headquarters shuts down service, and all Nextel Partners customers are now handled through the new "Ensemble" billing system. All Nextel Partners customers are now Sprint Nextel customers and are entitled to the same promotions as all other Sprint Nextel iDEN customers.
  • August 2, 2007: Sprint Nextel Corporation completes the acquisition of Northern PCS for $312.5 million including debt.[64]
  • July 28, 2009: Sprint Nextel announces a $483 million acquisition agreement for Virgin Mobile USA, adding 5 million pre-paid customers to Sprint Nextel, although these subscribers were counted in Sprint's total subscriber count, as Virgin Mobile USA was an MVNO on Sprint's CDMA network.[65]
  • October 19, 2009: Sprint Nextel agrees to acquire iPCS, one of its last remaining affiliates.[66]

Consolidation to Overland Park

After the Sprint-Nextel merger, the company maintained an executive headquarters in Reston, Virginia and operational headquarters in Overland Park, Kansas. Sprint CEO Dan Hesse recognized that having two headquarters was not helping the merger effort, sent the wrong message to employees and contributed to the post-merger cultural clash. To resolve the problem, Hesse decided to consolidate all headquarters operations in the Sprint World Headquarters Campus located in Overland Park, Kansas,[67] a suburb in the Kansas City metropolitan area.

Acquisition by SoftBank Corporation

On October 14, 2012, the Japanese telecommunications company SoftBank announced it intended to purchase 70% of Sprint Nextel Corporation for $20.1 billion.[68] SoftBank stated that Sprint will remain a separate entity, and will remain a CDMA carrier until it is an all-LTE carrier.[69] On April 15, 2013, Dish Network announced a higher bid for Sprint Nextel than the offer placed by SoftBank, with a $25.5 billion offer. On June 18, 2013, Dish retracted its bid and decided that it would instead focus on its intent to purchase Clearwire, however on June 26, 2013, Dish also retracted its bid for Clearwire, leaving the road clear for SoftBank to acquire the company. The United States Federal Communications Commission approved SoftBank's acquisition of a stake in Sprint. The FCC's acting chairwoman Mignon Clyburn and commissioner Ajit Pai both gave statements vociferously supporting the acquisition, saying the deal "serve[s] the public interest".[70] The acquisition was completed on July 10, 2013.

On August 6, 2013, SoftBank purchased approximately 2% more shares of Sprint Corporation, increasing its ownership stake in the company to 80%.[71]

Additional acquisitions

On November 7, 2012, Sprint Nextel announced the acquisition of 20 MHz of spectrum and 585,000 customers from U.S. Cellular in Chicago, St. Louis, central Illinois and three other Midwest markets. The deal was expected to close in mid-2013.[72]

Prior to July 9, 2013, Sprint Nextel only owned a 50.8% equity interest in Clearwire Corporation; On December 17, 2012, Sprint Nextel agreed to pay US$2.97 per share, US$2.2 billion in total, to purchase the portion of Clearwire shares that Sprint Nextel did not already own. On June 20, 2013, Sprint Nextel increased its offer to $5 per share, the transaction was approved by regulators on July 5, 2013, and closed on July 9, 2013, and Sprint Nextel became the complete owner of Clearwire and its assets.

On March 31, 2015, the U.S. bankruptcy court approved a $160 million takeover of electronics store chain RadioShack by Standard General. As part of the deal, the company entered into a partnership with Sprint to serve as co-tenants in 1,435 of its locations, beginning on April 10, 2015. Roughly a third of the retail space in each location is dedicated to Sprint products and services, and the stores will ultimately adopt Sprint as their primary brand in place of RadioShack. Sprint stated that this deal would increase the company's retail footprint by more than double.[73][74]

On January 23, 2017, Sprint announced that they were buying a 33 percent stake in the music streaming service Tidal.[75]

 
Final Sprint logo used after its merger with T-Mobile until its overall retirement on August 2, 2020.

Merger with T-Mobile US

Wireline operations

 
An old Sprint network interface device inside of a Port Charlotte, Florida business, which is now used by CenturyLink.

Sprint derives revenue as a wireline IP network operator and as a long-distance telephony provider. Sprint is the United States' fourth largest long-distance provider by subscribers.[76]

In 2006, Sprint Nextel exited the local landline telephone business, spinning those assets off into a newly created company named Embarq, which CenturyTel acquired in 2008 to form CenturyLink.

SprintLink

SprintLink is a global Tier 1 Internet service provider network, operating an 100G[77] Internet backbone. Customers include large multinational corporations, government agencies, retail and restaurant chains, Tier 2 and Tier 3 ISPs, and medium-to-small businesses. SprintLink has physical presence in 155 countries, including the United States, Western Europe, East Asia, Australia, and India.[78] The network wraps all the way around the world with buried fiber optics in the United States and Europe, and undersea fiber in the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans. SprintLink is responsible for cable maintenance and administration in the TAT-14 Consortium. In 2008, Sprint was upgrading its SprintLink core to 100Gbit/s lines to offer increased bandwidth.[79] As of June 2012, Sprint picked Ciena for upgrading its Sprintlink core to 400Gbit/s speeds.[80]

Ethernet services

In 2007, Sprint launched Ethernet services over its IP/MPLS network to an initial 40-markets. Sprint later expanded their Ethernet services to 65 markets in September 2011.[81] Sprint then launched Ethernet over copper and Ethernet over DOCSIS in 2016 to complement its Fiber Ethernet offerings.[82]

Sprint Web Services

Sprint offers its enterprise customers managed web-based services through its Sprint Web Services[83] program. It allows enterprise customers to create managed web-based applications

IoT & Connected Services

In 2015, Sprint powered the Connected Officer program for the Los Angeles Police Department in partnership with Samsung, VMware, and Prodapt.[84]

Telecommunications Relay Services

Sprint wireline is also responsible for traditional telecommunications relay service (TRS), speech to speech relay service (STS), and captioned telephone service (CTS). Sprint is in the process of upgrading these services from a TDM network to an IP-based network[85]

Wireless operations

 
This "Sprint Store by ccComm" located in Hillsboro, Oregon sells Sprint-branded wireless products and services exclusively.

Sprint branded services

Sprint Corporation offered postpaid wireless voice and data services primarily under the Sprint brand.

Sprint Prepaid Group

The Sprint Prepaid Group was a division of the company formed in May 2010 that is responsible for the operations of Sprint's pre-pay subsidiaries. SPG's branded products and services are sold via web and available at retailers nationwide, including Best Buy, Walmart, Target and other independent dealers.

Boost Mobile

Boost Worldwide, Inc. was a wholly owned subsidiary of Sprint that provides nationwide, prepaid wireless voice, messaging and broadband data products and services to customers in the contiguous United States under the Boost Mobile brand. The services are provided as an MVNO hosted on the Sprint-owned CDMA, EVDO, WiMAX, LTE, and LTE Advanced networks.

Sprint Smart Velocity

Sprint Velocity was Sprint Corporation's Connected Vehicle Platform, announced in 2012 in partnership with Chrysler.

Wireless wholesale operations and affiliates

Sprint Corporation provided services using both its own spectrum and network equipment through affiliate agreements. Smaller affiliated companies operated their own network assets and retail operations but offered services to customers in their geographic region under the Sprint brand.

In the early stages of network build-out, the company relied significantly on network partners known as affiliates to rapidly expand its coverage. These affiliates would lease Sprint's PCS spectrum licenses in a specific geographic area, typically rural areas, and smaller cities, and provide wireless service using the Sprint brand. Sprint provided back-end support such as billing and telephone-based customer service, while the affiliates built and maintained the network, sold equipment to customers, and staffed the retail stores in their specific regions. Its customers could "roam" across Sprint-operated and affiliate-operated portions of the network without being aware of the distinction, and vice versa. Outwardly, efforts were made to make it appear as if the network was operated by a single entity under the Sprint name, though complex revenue-sharing agreements were in place which was very similar in nature to cross-carrier roaming tariffs. In later years, the relationship between Sprint and its affiliates grew contentious, particularly after Sprint's acquisition of Nextel. Various affiliates included Swiftel Communications in Brookings, South Dakota;[86] Shentel in northern Virginia, and parts of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and West Virginia.

Sprint Rural Alliance

Sprint Rural Alliance (SRA) members (aka Sprint Partners) were carriers who used their own equipment and also sold their own service under their own name while using Sprint spectrum. Sprint was given access to the SRA network in return for allowing the use of Sprint spectrum. This allowed Sprint to keep the spectrum license for the geographic area being served by the SRA member. Alaska DigiTel in Alaska was an SRA Member. Former SRA Members included Alltel Wireless in Montana; This portion of the network was obtained by AT&T during the merger of Alltel and Verizon Wireless, Pioneer Cellular in Kansas and Oklahoma; they ended their agreement with Sprint on March 1, 2012, and transitioned to an agreement with Verizon through the LTE in Rural America program, nTelos; operated in West Virginia and was bought out and merged with Shentel which was a Sprint Affiliate.

Mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs)

Sprint Corporation provided capacity on its CDMA2000, EVDO, and LTE wireless networks to mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs), which allowed other wireless providers to utilize its networks to offer its services. Sprint's prepaid brands operated using Sprint's networks, though they were not MVNOs, but rather wholly owned prepaid subsidiaries of the company.

Bring Your Own Sprint Device

Sprint Corporation allowed certain Sprint MVNOs to accept and activate old Sprint-branded phones through its "Bring Your Own Sprint Device" program which was established for Sprint's initiative to further reduce the number of cell phones that were thrown away each year. The program was also beneficial to MVNOs customers who did not want to pay subsidized prices.[87]

Custom Branded Device Program

Sprint Corporation offered its MVNOs a program called the "Custom Branded Device Program", which gave MVNOs access to completely unbranded Android smartphones with no references to Sprint that the MVNO could then customize with its own branded apps and services through Sprint's Mobile ID and Mobile Zone products. Though these phones were free of Sprint branding, they were certified to run on Sprint networks.[88]

Data roaming agreements

On May 9, 2006, Sprint Nextel and Alltel agreed on a new Nationwide Roaming partnership.[89][90] It was reciprocal, and gave Alltel customers access to the Sprint 1x and EV-DO network and Sprint customers access to Alltel's denser, rural 1x and EV-DO voice and data network. The roaming reciprocity agreement between Alltel and Sprint was set to expire in 2016.

Sprint and Verizon Wireless had a reciprocal data roaming agreement[91] that allowed for the use of Sprint Power Vision content like TV, movie downloads, and stream radio in Verizon 1x and EVDO coverage areas.

Sprint also had a reciprocal 1xRTT, EVDO and LTE data and voice roaming agreement with U.S. Cellular. Sprint had an LTE roaming agreement with AT&T as well, which was typically limited to 3G speeds. Several cases of Sprint phones simultaneously roaming on Verizon's CDMA network for voice and AT&T's LTE network for data were observed in 2017.

In 2018, with the announcement of the Sprint and T-Mobile merger, Sprint gained access to roaming on T-Mobile's LTE network for 4 years. Roaming on T-Mobile was counted as native data usage and had no speed restrictions.

Wireless networks

The following is a list of known CDMA, LTE, and NR frequencies which Sprint employed in the United States:

Frequency Band Band Number Protocol Generation Status Notes
800 MHz
Sec. 800 MHz
10 IS-95/1xRTT/
EVDO/1X Advanced
2G/3G Decommissioned Sprint's CDMA network was completely shut down on May 31, 2022.[92][93][94]
1.9 GHz PCS 1
700 MHz Upper C
Block
13 LTE/LTE-A 4G Limited to Puerto Rico and the USVI. Previously operated under the Open Mobile brand.[95] Sprint's LTE network was completely shut down on June 30, 2022.[96]
850 MHz E-CLR 26 Sprint's LTE network was completely shut down on June 30, 2022.[96]
1.9 GHz E-PCS 25
2.5 GHz BRS/EBS 41
5.2 GHz U-NII 46
2.5 GHz BRS/EBS n41 NR 5G Sprint's 5G network was shut down by T-Mobile on July 1, 2020.[97]

CDMA

 
Sierra Wireless AirCard 550 modem for connecting a laptop to Sprint's "PCS Vision" network

Sprint operated a nationwide CDMA network in the 1.9 GHz PCS band. In 2006, Sprint's EV-DO "Power Vision" network reached more than 190 million people. Sprint then continued to upgrade their 3G EV-DO network until it reached 260 million people in 2007. Sprint eventually covered over 300 million PoPs with EV-DO services. Sprint added eHRPD to its network (EV-DO routed through an LTE core network) in order to facilitate smooth handoffs between LTE and EV-DO.

As a result of the Merger with T-Mobile US, Sprint's CDMA network was completely shut down on May 31, 2022.[92][93][94]

LTE

On July 28, 2011, Sprint announced that it had decided to end its rollout of the 4G network using WiMAX technology, in favor of more internationally accepted LTE technology. Sprint had also announced that it entered into a 15-year agreement that included spectrum hosting, network services, 4G wholesale and 3G roaming, with LightSquared. That deal, however, was later dissolved due to regulatory issues which LightSquared was unable to resolve with the FCC.[98]

Sprint announced initial LTE deployment plans at the Sprint Strategy Update conference on October 7, 2011. Network Vision-partner Samsung began LTE deployments on October 27, 2011, in Chicago, Illinois.[99] Sprint projected that the LTE network would cover 123 million people in 2012 and over 250 million people by the end of 2013.

On January 5, 2012, Sprint announced via Twitter its first 4G LTE markets, that included Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio; on June 27, 2012, Sprint stated that it would launch its new 4G LTE network in the first five markets the following month and on July 15, 2012, Sprint commenced operating the LTE network. In addition to the five announced markets, it was launched in 10 other markets, with more markets to be covered by the end of the year.[100]

Sprint initially deployed LTE in the 1900 MHz PCS G block, and over time added LTE to its 1900-MHz PCS A-F block spectrum. Sprint also deployed LTE in the 850-MHz E-CLR band and the 2500-MHz BRS/EBS band.

In February 2013, Sprint's Prepaid Group, which operated Virgin Mobile USA and Boost Mobile, began offering products and services using Sprint's LTE network.[101]

On April 15, 2016, it was reported that Sprint covered more than 300 million PoPs with LTE services.[102]

Sprint eventually rolled out VoLTE, although the deployment was initially limited to select markets. iOS devices newer than the iPhone 8, as well as a few select Android flagship devices, supported VoLTE on Sprint. VoLTE and Wi-Fi Calling are interoperable, and devices can transfer calls between the two networks. Calls initiated on Wi-Fi by non-VoLTE devices will transfer calls to the LTE network if Wi-Fi coverage becomes too weak to sustain the call, although they are unable to initiate calls on LTE.

As a result of the Merger with T-Mobile US, the Sprint LTE network was shut down on June 30, 2022.[96]

Wireless products and services

Mobile devices

Sprint offered a variety of wireless and mobile broadband products from a full range of manufacturers, that were preloaded with mobile operating systems including Google's Android or Apple's iOS. Sprint's partner device manufactures included Apple, BlackBerry, HTC, Kyocera, LG, Motorola, Samsung, Sharp, Sonim, and ZTE.

Broadband for the home via Sprint Mobile

In order to offer broadband directly to the home, Sprint launched a co-branded Broadband[103] Wireless Access Point device along with Linksys, a unit of Cisco Systems. This unit allowed Sprint customers to set up a special network in a home or office computer network, connecting multiple computers or laptops wirelessly to Sprint's PowerVision network. This broadband service to the Internet allowed some customers to have broadband without paying for telephone service. The PowerVision router allowed one to bypass the local telephone and cable broadband service providers. Such Broadband offerings to the home or office without cable or DSL meant the router could be used to provide cheaper VoIP services through Sprint's high-speed network.

Sprint Music Plus

On October 31, 2005, the Sprint Music Store was launched. Initial record-label participation included EMI Music, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Warner Music Group, and Universal Music Group. On November 1, 2006, after one year of service, the store had sold more than 8 million songs, partly thanks to the five free songs it offered customers at launch.[104] On April 1, 2007, the Sprint Music Store started offering music downloads at the price of 99 cents per track to customers who agreed to subscribe to a Vision pack of $15 or higher.

The service was rebranded as Sprint Music Plus in 2011, managed by RealNetworks.[105] It offered full-track music files from various labels (albums and single tracks), ringback tones, and ringtones. From July 2013, Sprint Music Plus app was managed by OnMobile Global, a company headquartered in Bangalore, India.[citation needed]

Google Play

On May 16, 2012, Sprint began to allow subscribers to bill application purchases from Google Play to their phone account.[106]

Sprint Airave and Magic Box

On September 17, 2007, Sprint Nextel launched the Airave, which increased cell reception over an area of 5,000 square feet (460 m2) and could handle up to three calls at once by hooking into an existing broadband connection and using VOIP. The Airave helped eliminate poor signal quality inside buildings. Airave was used only for voice calls using a Sprint CDMA phone and was unavailable for Nextel iDEN phones or data cards/USB modems. By default, the Airave unit allowed any Sprint phone to connect through it, but it could be reconfigured to accept only connections from up to 50 authorized numbers in order to eliminate unwanted use. The Airrave used the customers' own bandwidth to connect calls—potentially slowing internet speeds on less ample connections, and causing the customer to essentially subsidize the Sprint network.[107] Sprint was one of the only carriers that had not charged its customers for this type of device if the customer demonstrated that Sprint coverage was inadequate where they lived.

Airave 2.0 was a device that supported up to six devices simultaneously and data usage. The device required a land-based internet service (such as DSL or cable modem) to produce the CDMA signal. The Airave 2.5 improved reliability and had two LAN ports.[108]

Airave 3.0 was a device that broadcast both CDMA and LTE using band 41 that was approved by the FCC in late 2016[109] and became available in 2017.[110] It required a cable internet connection and included a WAN RJ45 port and two RJ45 ethernet LAN ports.

The Magic Box created its own Band 41 LTE signal and used Band 41 or Band 25 LTE signals instead of a cable connection for the internet. It was designed to be placed on a window sill and broadcast to the inside of a building plus outside the building for 100 meters or further.[111]

Defunct brands and networks

CLEAR

CLEAR was the brand of mobile broadband services offered by Clearwire Corporation, which was acquired by Sprint Nextel in July 2013. The brand provided mobile and fixed wireless broadband communications services to retail and wholesale customers in Belgium, Spain, and the United States. Sprint ended the CLEAR brand in September 2013 shortly after it closed its acquisition of Clearwire, and it no longer offers CLEAR-branded products and services to new customers.[112]

Common Cents Mobile

 

Sprint Nextel began offering pre-paid wireless products and services via wholly owned MVNO Common Cents Mobile on May 13, 2010.[113] Sprint Nextel intended these products and services as a lower-cost alternative, charging $.07 per minute for voice calls with round-down timing and $.07 per text message. The products and services were initially available through Walmart stores; Sprint Nextel had planned to expand the distribution of Common Cents Mobile to other outlets, but never did.[114]

On May 18, 2011, Sprint Nextel discontinued operating its Common Cents Mobile pre-paid brand, on the basis, it was a duplicate of the offerings of the Virgin Mobile USA PayLo brand. Common Cents Mobile customers were transitioned to a Virgin Mobile payLo service plan that allowed the former Common Cents Mobile customers to keep their existing $.07 per minute rate.[114][115][116]

Nextel Direct Connect

Sprint Nextel decided to decommission the iDEN (Nextel National) network it had acquired after merging with Nextel Communications in order to repurpose the network for LTE coverage, Sprint stopped offering Nextel Direct Connect walkie-talkie service. Instead, Sprint persuades many of its customers into their replacement service – Sprint Direct Connect which operates on the CDMA network.

Virgin Mobile and Assurance Wireless

Virgin Mobile USA, L.P. was a wholly owned subsidiary of Sprint Corporation and provided nationwide, prepaid wireless voice, messaging, and broadband data products and services to customers in the contiguous United States under the Virgin Mobile, payLo, and "Assurance Wireless Brought to You by Virgin Mobile" brands. It operated as an MVNO and provided services to its customers via the Sprint-owned CDMA, EVDO, WiMAX, and LTE networks.[117]

Virgin Mobile USA, L.P. also offered lifeline telephone service subsidized by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission's Universal Service Fund under the "Assurance Wireless Brought to You by Virgin Mobile" brand. The program offers a free wireless phone and 250 free local and domestic long-distance voice minutes per month to eligible low-income customers in 31 states. End users do not receive a bill, nor are they required to sign a contract, and do not pay activation fees, recurring fees, or surcharges.[118]

Discontinued networks

iDEN

Sprint Nextel operated an iDEN nationwide network in the 800 MHz and 900 MHz SMR frequency band. Sprint Corporation acquired the iDEN network as a result of its merger with Nextel Communications in 2005. The iDEN network was originally deployed as a dispatch radio service and is unique in blending the half-duplex push-to-talk one-to-many broadcast capability of a walkie-talkie with the one-to-one private communication of a phone. Sprint later marketed "push-to-talk" services under the Nextel Direct Connect name.

In October 2010, as part of the "Network Vision" plan, Sprint CEO Dan Hesse announced the decommissioning of the iDEN network to reduce costs, improve the coverage and performance of the 3G CDMA network and enable Sprint Nextel to focus on 4G LTE technology. Sprint Nextel announced on May 29, 2012, that it will stop marketing iDEN devices in the third quarter of 2012 and that the iDEN network could be completely decommissioned "as early as June 30, 2013".[119] As of June 5, 2012, Sprint and Boost Mobile ceased offering iDEN devices, removing the devices and their associated service plans from the Sprint and Boost Mobile websites and retail locations. The Nextel national network was shut down on schedule at 12:01 am on June 30, 2013.

Radio frequency range Band number Generation Radio Interface Status
800 MHz ESMR N/A 2G iDEN Decommissioned
900 MHz ESMR[120][121] N/A 2G iDEN Decommissioned

WiMAX

Sprint Corporation operated a 4G WiMAX network in the 2.5 GHz band, which had been operated by Clearwire Corporation before it was acquired. Sprint also provided its prepay partners Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile access to data services via the WiMAX network; including other Mobile virtual network operators under wholesale agreements.

Sprint Nextel had won rights to radio spectrum in the 2.5 GHz band to provision fourth-generation services and began to build out a WiMAX network, offering services under the Xohm brand. However, on May 7, 2008, Sprint Nextel announced it would merge its WiMAX wireless broadband unit with Clearwire Corporation, receiving equity in Clearwire in return. The two companies completed the transaction on November 28, 2008.[122] Sprint became the owner of Clearwire, after outbidding Dish Network for the company.

On October 8, 2008, Sprint Nextel launched WiMAX in Baltimore and showed off several new laptops that will have embedded WiMAX chips. They announced that Sprint will be offering dual-mode 3G/4G products by the end of the year. Baltimore was the first city to get Xohm, but it was launched soon after in more cities, such as Chicago and Philadelphia.[123]

On April 19, 2011, Sprint Nextel announced it agreed to pay at least $1 billion to Clearwire so it can operate on the 4G WiMAX network through 2012, and a later agreement, announced in December 2011, specified terms allowing Sprint, its subsidiaries, and wholesale customers to continue having access to the Clearwire 4G WiMAX network through 2015. On July 9, 2013, Sprint Nextel acquired the remaining stock shares it did not already own in Clearwire and its assets.[124]

Sprint Corporation is working on migrating WiMAX customers to LTE compatible devices in order to begin transitioning the WiMAX bands to TDD LTE. In July 2013, Sprint announced its first tri-band products capable of accessing TDD-LTE data connections in the 2.5 GHz band still used for WiMAX.[125]

Sprint planned to shut its WiMAX network on November 6, 2015, however, an emergency injunction was granted by a judge of the Massachusetts Superior Court on November 5, 2015, to keep the WiMax network online for another 90 days, due to the ongoing lawsuit from non-profit groups. The groups, Mobile Beacon and Mobile Citizen, said that the network shutdown violates the contract which requires Sprint to provide high-speed internet services for low-income families and public institutions, as most of the equipment was still not LTE-compatible. Sprint pledged to provide upgrades to the equipment and work out a solution with the groups as soon as possible. Most of the WiMax network not running in the affected areas were shut down.[126] On February 1, 2016, the same court declared that Sprint can proceed with the network shutdown in the remaining 75 cities. Sprint took the network of 16 cities, including New York City, offline on February 2, 2016, and closed 39 more on February 29, 2016. On March 31, 2016, the last 25 cities' networks were shut down.[127]

Controversies

Device unlocking

For devices launched after February 15, 2015, Sprint unlocked phones when Lease/Service/Billing Agreements were satisfied and accounts were in good standing.[128]

For devices launched before February 15, 2015, Sprint did not authorize the use of GSM-capable devices, including both phones and tablets it sold, on a United States-based competitor's network, such as T-Mobile or AT&T.[129] Unlike the aforementioned companies, which have comparatively lenient policies about unlocking phones, such as when the device is paid off or the contract is fulfilled, and Verizon, whose GSM-capable devices ship with the GSM portion already unlocked, Sprint only unlocked devices for international use for customers in good standing after contacting customer support.[130]

This limitation meant phones and tablets sold by Sprint that were launched prior to February 15, 2015, only lawfully functioned on the Sprint network, a policy that prevented what may have otherwise been compatibility with another carrier's network. Additionally, iPhones sold by Sprint generally had the lowest resale value of devices sold by the top four carriers in the US.[131] Means to unlock a GSM-capable iPhone existed, such as using a SIM interposer, but the device may not have functioned fully or correctly on the desired network, and unlocking of the device was a violation of the law under the terms of the DMCA up until August 1, 2014, when President Obama signed into law a bill allowing the unlocking of cell phones.[132]

FCC fine over Do Not Call rule breaches

In May 2014, the company was fined $7.5 million by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission for failing to honor consumer requests to opt-out of marketing messages delivered by phone and text messages. Sprint was ordered to implement a comprehensive two-year plan to comply with the commission's rules including training of Sprint employees on how to comply with Do Not Call rules. American consumers have had the option of nominating not to receive telemarketing calls and texts since 2003, by placing their names on the National Do Not Call Registry.[133]

Law compliance

As required by law in the United States, in response to court orders and warrants, Sprint Nextel provided law enforcement agencies with its wireless subscribers' GPS locations over 8 million times in one year between September 2008 and October 2009.[134] The disclosures occurred by way of a special, secure portal which Sprint developed specifically for government officials, which enabled users to automatically obtain Sprint customers' GPS locations after the request has been reviewed and activated by Sprint's surveillance department.[135]

Marketing

Advertising

In 2016, Sprint began a major television advertising campaign that promoted its reliability as being within 1% of other major providers, such as Verizon. The advertisements featured Paul Marcarelli, an American actor once known for pitching Verizon with the phrase "Can you hear me now?" In the ads, Marcarelli noted that he had switched to Sprint and touted pricing of approximately half that of other providers, commenting "Can you hear that?" The ads featured the slogan "Don't let a 1% difference cost you twice as much."[136]

Sponsorships

Film

Sprint cellphones were product placed in such movies such as Men in Black II (2002), The Departed (2006), Dan in Real Life (2007), Superbad (2007), Wild Hogs (2007), 27 Dresses (2008), Baby Mama (2008), Beverly Hills Chihuahua (2008), Eagle Eye (2008), The Spiderwick Chronicles (2008), Sex and the City (film) (2008), Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel (2009), Bride Wars (2009), Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009), and The Gambler (2014).

Sprint was also featured in Baywatch (film) (2017) by Dwayne The Rock Johnson’s character, Mitch.

Music

Sprint was the official wireless sponsor of the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards. Sprint Power Vision customers were able to watch the VMAs on a live simulcast on their Sprint Power Vision handset free of charge.

Sports

In Time Magazine's November 13, 2006 issue, Sprint Nextel's NASCAR FanView was named One of Best Inventions of 2006.[137] The NASCAR FanView is a portable PDA that runs on Sprint's data network. The device offers fans access to "Race telecast and up to seven in-car camera channels, direct audio feeds allowing the user to listen to live driver and team conversations, as well as the radio broadcast and an exclusive audio-replay feature."

From 2008 to 2016, Sprint Corporation was the major title sponsor of NASCAR’s top racing series, formerly called the NEXTEL Cup, which became known as the Sprint Cup Series on February 9, 2008.[138] Since then, Sprint signed a contract extension with NASCAR to continue sponsoring the series through the 2016 season.[139] Sprint was replaced by Monster Energy after the 2016 season.[140]

Sprint Corporation held the naming rights to the Sprint Center in Kansas City, Missouri; after the merger in 2020, the arena was renamed the T-Mobile Center (not to be confused with T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas).[141]

Sprint Nextel announced in December 2011 that it reached a multi-year exclusive partnership with the National Basketball Association (NBA) to be the league's official wireless service partner.[142]

Sprint was also a sponsor for the Copa América Centenario in 2016.[143]

Television

Sprint was a sponsor of the Fox television series 24 and Fringe.[citation needed]

Sprint was a major sponsor of the NBC television series Heroes and provided exclusive web content to subscribers. Sprint was also the mobile sponsor of NBC's The Voice.[citation needed]

Sprint was a major sponsor of competition reality shows, such as Big Brother and Survivor on CBS, which enabled viewers to vote each week for "Player of the Game".[citation needed]

See also

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External links

  • Official website (Archive) (Wireless)
    • Historical business data for Sprint Corporation:
    • SEC filings

sprint, corporation, american, telecommunications, company, before, merged, with, mobile, april, 2020, fourth, largest, mobile, network, operator, united, states, serving, million, customers, june, 2019, company, also, offered, wireless, voice, messaging, broa. Sprint Corporation was an American telecommunications company Before it merged with T Mobile US on April 1 2020 it was the fourth largest mobile network operator in the United States serving 54 3 million customers as of June 30 2019 3 The company also offered wireless voice messaging and broadband services through its various subsidiaries under the Boost Mobile and Open Mobile brands and wholesale access to its wireless networks to mobile virtual network operators Sprint CorporationFormer Sprint World Headquarters Campus in Overland Park Kansas U S FormerlyBrown Telephone Company 1899 1911 United Telephone Company 1911 1925 United Telephone and Electric 1925 1938 United Utilities Inc 1938 1972 United Telecommunications and United Telephone System 1972 1987 Sprint Corporation 1987 2005 2013 2020 Sprint Nextel Corporation 2005 2013 TypePublicTraded asNYSE SIndustryTelecommunicationsPredecessorsSPCGTE SprintUS SprintEmbarqNextel CommunicationsFoundedDecember 21 1899 123 years ago 1899 12 21 1 FoundersCleyson BrownJacob BrownDefunctApril 1 2020 2 years ago 2020 04 01 as an independent company August 2 2020 2 years ago 2020 08 02 official FateMerged into T Mobile USHeadquartersOverland Park Kansas U S Area servedUnited StatesServicesMobile Telephony Wireless communicationsInternet servicesBroadbandRevenueUS 33 60 billion 2019 Operating incomeUS 398 million 2019 Net incomeUS 1 94 billion 2019 Total assetsUS 84 60 billion 2019 Total equityUS 26 07 billion 2019 OwnerT MobileNumber of employees28 500 Q1 2019 ParentT Mobile USSubsidiariesi wireless Open Mobile SprintCom Central Telephone UbiquiTelWebsiteArchived official website at the Wayback Machine archived 2020 07 31 Footnotes references 2 In July 2013 a majority of the company was purchased by the Japanese telecommunications company SoftBank Group 4 Sprint used CDMA EvDO and 4G LTE networks and formerly operated iDEN WiMAX and 5G NR networks Sprint was incorporated in Kansas 5 Sprint traced its origins to the Brown Telephone Company which was founded in 1899 to bring telephone service to the rural area around Abilene Kansas In 2006 Sprint left the local landline telephone business and spun those assets off into a new company named Embarq which later became a part of Lumen Tech formerly CenturyLink which remains one of the largest long distance providers in the United States Until 2005 the company was also known as the Sprint Corporation but took the name Sprint Nextel Corporation when it merged with Nextel Communications and adopted its black and yellow color scheme along with a new logo In 2013 following the shutdown of the Nextel network and concurrent with the acquisition by SoftBank the company resumed using the name Sprint Corporation In July 2013 as part of the SoftBank transactions Sprint acquired the remaining shares of the wireless broadband carrier Clearwire Corporation that it did not already own In August 2014 CEO Dan Hesse was replaced by Marcelo Claure 6 In May 2018 Michel Combes replaced 7 Claure and had been working to get Sprint s merger with its rival T Mobile through regulatory proceedings 8 On April 1 2020 Sprint Corporation completed their merger with T Mobile US which effectively made Sprint a subsidiary of T Mobile until the Sprint brand officially discontinued in the beginning of August Leadership background and stock changes happened immediately with customer side changes happening over time The Sprint brand officially discontinued on August 2 2020 Billing was already showing the T Mobile brand and on this date all retail customer service and all other company branding switched to the T Mobile brand New rate plans were also introduced as well for all new and existing customers from both companies though all will be grandfathered into their current plan for at least 3 years should they choose not to switch to a new T Mobile plan 9 10 11 12 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 1 1 Brown Telephone Company 1 1 2 Southern Pacific Communications and introduction of Sprint 1 2 Consolidation and renaming to Sprint Corporation 1 3 Expansion to Canada 1 4 Return to wireless 1 5 Partnerships and more consolidation 1 6 Merger of Sprint Corporation and Nextel Communications 1 6 1 Affiliate acquisitions and settlements 1 7 Consolidation to Overland Park 1 8 Acquisition by SoftBank Corporation 1 8 1 Additional acquisitions 1 9 Merger with T Mobile US 2 Wireline operations 2 1 SprintLink 2 2 Ethernet services 2 3 Sprint Web Services 2 4 IoT amp Connected Services 2 5 Telecommunications Relay Services 3 Wireless operations 3 1 Sprint branded services 3 2 Sprint Prepaid Group 3 2 1 Boost Mobile 3 3 Sprint Smart Velocity 4 Wireless wholesale operations and affiliates 4 1 Sprint Rural Alliance 4 2 Mobile virtual network operators MVNOs 4 2 1 Bring Your Own Sprint Device 4 2 2 Custom Branded Device Program 4 3 Data roaming agreements 5 Wireless networks 5 1 CDMA 5 2 LTE 6 Wireless products and services 6 1 Mobile devices 6 2 Broadband for the home via Sprint Mobile 6 3 Sprint Music Plus 6 4 Google Play 6 5 Sprint Airave and Magic Box 7 Defunct brands and networks 7 1 CLEAR 7 2 Common Cents Mobile 7 3 Nextel Direct Connect 7 4 Virgin Mobile and Assurance Wireless 7 5 Discontinued networks 7 5 1 iDEN 7 5 2 WiMAX 8 Controversies 8 1 Device unlocking 8 2 FCC fine over Do Not Call rule breaches 8 3 Law compliance 9 Marketing 9 1 Advertising 9 2 Sponsorships 9 2 1 Film 9 2 2 Music 9 2 3 Sports 9 2 4 Television 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early years Edit The Sprint Corporation traces its origins to two companies the Brown Telephone Company and Southern Pacific Railroad 14 Brown Telephone Company Edit Brown Telephone Company was founded in 1899 by Cleyson Brown to deploy the first telephone service to the rural area around Abilene Kansas 15 The Browns installed their first long distance circuit in 1900 and became an alternative to the Bell Telephone Company the most popular telephone service at the time citation needed In 1911 C L Brown consolidated the Brown Telephone Company with three other independents to form the United Telephone Company 16 C L Brown formed United Telephone and Electric UT amp E in 1925 In 1939 at the end of the Great Depression UT amp E reorganized to form United Utilities 16 United Telephone System logo used from 1981 into the 1990s In 1964 Paul H Henson became president of United Utilities two years later he was named chairman 17 When Henson began working at the company in 1959 it had 575 000 telephones in 15 states and revenues of 65 million 18 19 17 Henson is credited with creating the first major fiber optic network having recognized it as a way to handle more calls and provide better quality sound 17 In 1972 United Utilities changed its name to United Telecommunications 16 In 1980 United Telecommunications began working on a 23 000 mile fiber optic network for long distance calls 17 In 1989 this long distance business became profitable for the company for the first time 17 In 1990 Henson retired from United Telecommunications by this time the company s revenues had grown to 8 billion 17 Southern Pacific Communications and introduction of Sprint Edit Sprint also traces its roots back to the Southern Pacific Railroad SPR which was founded in the 1860s as a subsidiary of the Southern Pacific Company SPC The company operated thousands of miles of track as well as telegraph wire that ran along those tracks In the early 1970s the company began looking for ways to use its existing communications lines for long distance calling 14 This division of the business was named the Southern Pacific Communications Company 20 By the mid 1970s SPC was beginning to take business away from AT amp T which held a monopoly at the time 14 A number of lawsuits between SPC and AT amp T took place throughout the 1970s the majority were decided in favor of increased competition 20 Prior attempts at offering long distance voice services had not been approved by the U S Federal Communications Commission FCC although a fax service called SpeedFAX was permitted 21 In the mid 1970s SPC held a contest to select a new name for the company 22 The winning entry was SPRINT an acronym for Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Networking Telephony 22 Consolidation and renaming to Sprint Corporation Edit Sprint Corporation brand mark 1987 2005 In 1982 it was announced that GTE Corp had reached an agreement to buy SPC s long distance telephone operation including Sprint The deal was later finalized in 1983 23 24 In 1986 GTE Sprint merged with the United Telecommunications Inc property US Telecom 25 The joint venture was to be co owned by GTE and United Telecom named US Sprint Communications 25 The new entity also included communications firm GTE Telenet and United Telecom Data communications Co formerly known as Uninet 26 In 1988 GTE sold more of Sprint to United Telecom giving United Telecom operational control of the company 27 United Telecom announced it would complete its acquisition of US Sprint on April 18 1990 28 United Telecom officially changed its name to Sprint Corporation in 1987 to capitalize on its brand recognition 29 Expansion to Canada Edit Main article Sprint Canada Sprint Corporation entered the Canadian market in the early 1990s as a reseller of bulk long distance telephone lines that it bought from domestic companies Under Canadian foreign ownership regulations Sprint could not open its own network In 1993 Sprint entered into a strategic alliance with Call Net Enterprises a Canadian long distance service and bought 25 percent of the company 30 Call Net s long distance service was renamed Sprint Canada and expanded to include landline and internet services In 2005 Call Net and Sprint Canada s 600 000 customers were acquired by Rogers Communications 31 Return to wireless Edit In March 1993 Sprint merged with Chicago s Centel Corp Centel remained in the Chicago area and was renamed Sprint Cellular Co 32 In 1994 Sprint spun off their existing cellular operations as 360 Communications to comply with an FCC regulatory mandate 33 In 1998 360 Communications was acquired by Alltel 34 which was in turn acquired by Verizon in 2009 35 In 1994 Sprint announces plans for a powerful new venture with three of the nation s major cable television companies Tele Communications Inc TCI Comcast Corp and Cox Cable The four companies outline plans to build a nationwide network to provide wireless personal communications service PCS and also affirm their support for a single integrated offering of wireless local telephone and long distance services in a package with cable television service 36 In 1995 Sprint and its cable television associates entered into a partnership with American Personal Communications APC to create a digital wireless network 37 In November 1995 the company began to offer wireless service under the Sprint Spectrum brand in the Baltimore Washington metropolitan area 37 This was the first commercial Personal Communications Service PCS network in the United States 37 Although the Sprint PCS service was CDMA the original Washington area network used GSM 37 Eventually Sprint launched its new nationwide CDMA network 37 then in 1999 sold the decommissioned GSM infrastructure to Omnipoint which re launched in May 2000 Omnipoint was later acquired by VoiceStream Wireless 38 which eventually became part of T Mobile US Sprint and T Mobile US merged in 2020 Partnerships and more consolidation Edit In September 1996 Sprint announced a deal with RadioShack and in 1997 Sprint stores opened at RadioShack to offer communications services and products across the United States 39 On October 5 1999 Sprint and MCI WorldCom announced a 129 billion merger agreement between the two companies 40 The deal would have been the largest corporate merger in history at the time However due to pressure from the United States Department of Justice and the European Union on concerns of it creating a monopoly the deal did not go through 41 In 1999 Sprint began recombining its local telecom long distance wireline and wireless business units into a new company in an initiative known internally as One Sprint In April 2004 the separately traded wireless tracking stock PCS was absorbed into the New York Stock Exchange FON ticker symbol Sprint s former ticker symbol FON stood for Fiber Optic Network but was also a homophone of the word phone 42 This was challenged in many lawsuits by Sprint PCS shareholders who felt their stock was devalued because it was trading at the ratio of 1 share of PCS stock for 1 2 share of FON stock The PCS shareholders claimed a loss of 1 3 billion to 3 4 billion dollars 43 Merger of Sprint Corporation and Nextel Communications Edit On December 15 2004 Sprint Corporation and Nextel Communications announced they would merge to form Sprint Nextel Corporation 44 The merger was transacted as a purchase of Nextel Communications by Sprint Corporation for tax reasons Sprint purchased 50 1 percent of Nextel At the time of the merger announcement Sprint and Nextel were the third and fifth leading providers in the U S mobile phone industry respectively 45 Sprint shareholders approved the merger on July 13 2005 46 The merger deal was approved by the U S Federal Communications Commission FCC and U S Department of Justice on August 3 2005 47 Sprint Nextel was formed on August 13 2005 when the deal was completed 48 Sprint and Nextel faced opposition to the merger mostly from regional affiliates that provided wireless services on behalf of the companies 49 These regional affiliates felt that the new company would hinder competition 49 On September 1 2005 Sprint Nextel combined plan offerings of its Sprint and Nextel brands to bring uniformity across the company s offerings citation needed Nextel has licensed its identity to NII Holdings Inc of which Sprint Nextel owned 18 NII has used the Nextel brand to set up networks in many Latin American countries Following Sprint s purchase of Nextel Nextel sold all of its investment in NII Holdings citation needed The integration process was difficult due to disparate network technologies Sprint tried to address this with the advent of PowerSource phones These phones routed voice call and data services over Sprint s PCS spectrum while maintaining DirectConnect services over 800 MHz spectrum However this was not sufficient in coverage due to the inability to roam on a non PCS spectrum citation needed Top Nextel Executives began leaving the company immediately after the merger closed Tim Donahue the Nextel CEO stayed on as executive chairman but ceded decision making authority to Gary D Forsee Tom Kelly COO of Nextel took an interim staff position as Chief Strategy Officer Two years after the merger only a few key Nextel executives remained with many former Nextel middle and upper level managers having left citing reasons including the unbridgeable cultural difference between the two companies citation needed In 2006 Sprint spun off its local telephone operations including the former United Telephone companies and Centel as Embarq 50 Sprint s acquisition of Nextel was a disaster from a fiscal standpoint in 2008 the company wrote down 29 7 billion of the 36 billion sum it had paid for Nextel in 2005 wiping out 80 percent of the value of Nextel at the time it had been acquired 51 The write down reflected the depreciation in Nextel s goodwill since the date of acquisition 52 Affiliate acquisitions and settlements Edit Prior to their merger Sprint and Nextel were dependent on a network of affiliated companies Following the announcement of the merger agreement some of these affiliates came forward with strong opposition to the Sprint Nextel merger on the grounds that the merged company might violate existing agreements or significantly undercut earnings to these affiliates In order for Sprint Nextel to allay some of this opposition they initiated discussions of either acquiring some of these affiliates or renegotiating existing agreements In several cases the newly formed company was forced to acquire affiliated companies in exchange for their dropping their opposition to the merger Forsee said that the company would likely have to acquire all of its remaining affiliates citation needed In 2005 Sprint Nextel acquired three of its ten wireless affiliates US Unwired acquired in August Gulf Coast Wireless acquired in October and IWO Holdings acquired in October Alamosa PCS which Sprint Nextel acquired on February 2 2006 was the largest of its affiliate carriers Other acquired affiliates include Ubiquitel iPCS Enterprise and Northern In 2021 after merging with Sprint in 2020 T Mobile acquired the remaining two of Sprint s original ten affiliates Shentel 53 and Swiftel 54 Below are companies which Sprint Corporation has acquired August 13 2005 Sprint acquires the Sprint PCS affiliate US Unwired for 1 3B thus adding 500 000 additional direct customers to Sprint Nextel 55 August 30 2005 Sprint Nextel announces its intention to acquire IWO Holdings Inc a mainly New England based network affiliate for the Sprint PCS business 56 The acquisition closed on October 20 2005 57 Sprint Nextel acquires Gulf Coast Wireless adding 95 000 customers mainly in Louisiana and Mississippi to Sprint Nextel s CDMA network The acquisition closed on October 3 2005 November 21 2005 Sprint Nextel announces a 4 3 billion acquisition agreement for Texas based Sprint PCS affiliate Alamosa Holdings potentially adding 1 48 million customers to Sprint Nextel 58 December 16 2005 Sprint Nextel announces a 98 million agreement to acquire Enterprise Communications of Columbus Georgia thus adding over 52 000 customers to the company s PCS Wireless division 59 December 16 2005 Sprint Nextel announces acquisition of non affiliate Velocita Wireless The transaction enhances the iDEN network s 900 MHz spectrum position 60 On July 2 2007 Velocita Wireless which became an indirect subsidiary of Sprint Nextel was acquired by United Wireless Holdings Inc 61 December 21 2005 Sprint Nextel Corporation and Nextel Partners Inc reach an agreement for a 6 5 billion deal whereby the Sprint Nextel Corporation acquires the largest of Nextel s affiliates to end Nextel Partners opposition to any changes by Sprint in relation to the Sprint Nextel merger Once completed the Nextel Partners deal adds more than 2 million customers directly to the Sprint Nextel company 62 April 20 2006 Sprint Nextel Corporation and Ubiquitel PCS Corporation reach an agreement whereby the Sprint Nextel Corporation acquires Ubiquitelpcs an exclusive Sprint PCS provider 63 March 17 2007 Sprint Nextel Corporation completes integration of Nextel Partners customers into the Sprint Nextel system Nextel Partners Las Vegas headquarters shuts down service and all Nextel Partners customers are now handled through the new Ensemble billing system All Nextel Partners customers are now Sprint Nextel customers and are entitled to the same promotions as all other Sprint Nextel iDEN customers August 2 2007 Sprint Nextel Corporation completes the acquisition of Northern PCS for 312 5 million including debt 64 July 28 2009 Sprint Nextel announces a 483 million acquisition agreement for Virgin Mobile USA adding 5 million pre paid customers to Sprint Nextel although these subscribers were counted in Sprint s total subscriber count as Virgin Mobile USA was an MVNO on Sprint s CDMA network 65 October 19 2009 Sprint Nextel agrees to acquire iPCS one of its last remaining affiliates 66 Consolidation to Overland Park Edit After the Sprint Nextel merger the company maintained an executive headquarters in Reston Virginia and operational headquarters in Overland Park Kansas Sprint CEO Dan Hesse recognized that having two headquarters was not helping the merger effort sent the wrong message to employees and contributed to the post merger cultural clash To resolve the problem Hesse decided to consolidate all headquarters operations in the Sprint World Headquarters Campus located in Overland Park Kansas 67 a suburb in the Kansas City metropolitan area Acquisition by SoftBank Corporation Edit On October 14 2012 the Japanese telecommunications company SoftBank announced it intended to purchase 70 of Sprint Nextel Corporation for 20 1 billion 68 SoftBank stated that Sprint will remain a separate entity and will remain a CDMA carrier until it is an all LTE carrier 69 On April 15 2013 Dish Network announced a higher bid for Sprint Nextel than the offer placed by SoftBank with a 25 5 billion offer On June 18 2013 Dish retracted its bid and decided that it would instead focus on its intent to purchase Clearwire however on June 26 2013 Dish also retracted its bid for Clearwire leaving the road clear for SoftBank to acquire the company The United States Federal Communications Commission approved SoftBank s acquisition of a stake in Sprint The FCC s acting chairwoman Mignon Clyburn and commissioner Ajit Pai both gave statements vociferously supporting the acquisition saying the deal serve s the public interest 70 The acquisition was completed on July 10 2013 On August 6 2013 SoftBank purchased approximately 2 more shares of Sprint Corporation increasing its ownership stake in the company to 80 71 Additional acquisitions Edit On November 7 2012 Sprint Nextel announced the acquisition of 20 MHz of spectrum and 585 000 customers from U S Cellular in Chicago St Louis central Illinois and three other Midwest markets The deal was expected to close in mid 2013 72 Prior to July 9 2013 Sprint Nextel only owned a 50 8 equity interest in Clearwire Corporation On December 17 2012 Sprint Nextel agreed to pay US 2 97 per share US 2 2 billion in total to purchase the portion of Clearwire shares that Sprint Nextel did not already own On June 20 2013 Sprint Nextel increased its offer to 5 per share the transaction was approved by regulators on July 5 2013 and closed on July 9 2013 and Sprint Nextel became the complete owner of Clearwire and its assets On March 31 2015 the U S bankruptcy court approved a 160 million takeover of electronics store chain RadioShack by Standard General As part of the deal the company entered into a partnership with Sprint to serve as co tenants in 1 435 of its locations beginning on April 10 2015 Roughly a third of the retail space in each location is dedicated to Sprint products and services and the stores will ultimately adopt Sprint as their primary brand in place of RadioShack Sprint stated that this deal would increase the company s retail footprint by more than double 73 74 On January 23 2017 Sprint announced that they were buying a 33 percent stake in the music streaming service Tidal 75 Final Sprint logo used after its merger with T Mobile until its overall retirement on August 2 2020 Merger with T Mobile US Edit Main article Merger of Sprint Corporation and T Mobile USWireline operations Edit An old Sprint network interface device inside of a Port Charlotte Florida business which is now used by CenturyLink See also Embarq Sprint derives revenue as a wireline IP network operator and as a long distance telephony provider Sprint is the United States fourth largest long distance provider by subscribers 76 In 2006 Sprint Nextel exited the local landline telephone business spinning those assets off into a newly created company named Embarq which CenturyTel acquired in 2008 to form CenturyLink SprintLink Edit SprintLink is a global Tier 1 Internet service provider network operating an 100G 77 Internet backbone Customers include large multinational corporations government agencies retail and restaurant chains Tier 2 and Tier 3 ISPs and medium to small businesses SprintLink has physical presence in 155 countries including the United States Western Europe East Asia Australia and India 78 The network wraps all the way around the world with buried fiber optics in the United States and Europe and undersea fiber in the Pacific Atlantic and Indian Oceans SprintLink is responsible for cable maintenance and administration in the TAT 14 Consortium In 2008 Sprint was upgrading its SprintLink core to 100Gbit s lines to offer increased bandwidth 79 As of June 2012 Sprint picked Ciena for upgrading its Sprintlink core to 400Gbit s speeds 80 Ethernet services Edit In 2007 Sprint launched Ethernet services over its IP MPLS network to an initial 40 markets Sprint later expanded their Ethernet services to 65 markets in September 2011 81 Sprint then launched Ethernet over copper and Ethernet over DOCSIS in 2016 to complement its Fiber Ethernet offerings 82 Sprint Web Services Edit Sprint offers its enterprise customers managed web based services through its Sprint Web Services 83 program It allows enterprise customers to create managed web based applications IoT amp Connected Services Edit In 2015 Sprint powered the Connected Officer program for the Los Angeles Police Department in partnership with Samsung VMware and Prodapt 84 Telecommunications Relay Services Edit Sprint wireline is also responsible for traditional telecommunications relay service TRS speech to speech relay service STS and captioned telephone service CTS Sprint is in the process of upgrading these services from a TDM network to an IP based network 85 Wireless operations Edit This Sprint Store by ccComm located in Hillsboro Oregon sells Sprint branded wireless products and services exclusively Sprint branded services Edit Sprint Corporation offered postpaid wireless voice and data services primarily under the Sprint brand Sprint Prepaid Group Edit The Sprint Prepaid Group was a division of the company formed in May 2010 that is responsible for the operations of Sprint s pre pay subsidiaries SPG s branded products and services are sold via web and available at retailers nationwide including Best Buy Walmart Target and other independent dealers Boost Mobile Edit Main article Boost Mobile Boost Worldwide Inc was a wholly owned subsidiary of Sprint that provides nationwide prepaid wireless voice messaging and broadband data products and services to customers in the contiguous United States under the Boost Mobile brand The services are provided as an MVNO hosted on the Sprint owned CDMA EVDO WiMAX LTE and LTE Advanced networks Sprint Smart Velocity Edit Sprint Velocity was Sprint Corporation s Connected Vehicle Platform announced in 2012 in partnership with Chrysler Wireless wholesale operations and affiliates EditSprint Corporation provided services using both its own spectrum and network equipment through affiliate agreements Smaller affiliated companies operated their own network assets and retail operations but offered services to customers in their geographic region under the Sprint brand In the early stages of network build out the company relied significantly on network partners known as affiliates to rapidly expand its coverage These affiliates would lease Sprint s PCS spectrum licenses in a specific geographic area typically rural areas and smaller cities and provide wireless service using the Sprint brand Sprint provided back end support such as billing and telephone based customer service while the affiliates built and maintained the network sold equipment to customers and staffed the retail stores in their specific regions Its customers could roam across Sprint operated and affiliate operated portions of the network without being aware of the distinction and vice versa Outwardly efforts were made to make it appear as if the network was operated by a single entity under the Sprint name though complex revenue sharing agreements were in place which was very similar in nature to cross carrier roaming tariffs In later years the relationship between Sprint and its affiliates grew contentious particularly after Sprint s acquisition of Nextel Various affiliates included Swiftel Communications in Brookings South Dakota 86 Shentel in northern Virginia and parts of Pennsylvania Maryland and West Virginia Sprint Rural Alliance Edit Sprint Rural Alliance SRA members aka Sprint Partners were carriers who used their own equipment and also sold their own service under their own name while using Sprint spectrum Sprint was given access to the SRA network in return for allowing the use of Sprint spectrum This allowed Sprint to keep the spectrum license for the geographic area being served by the SRA member Alaska DigiTel in Alaska was an SRA Member Former SRA Members included Alltel Wireless in Montana This portion of the network was obtained by AT amp T during the merger of Alltel and Verizon Wireless Pioneer Cellular in Kansas and Oklahoma they ended their agreement with Sprint on March 1 2012 and transitioned to an agreement with Verizon through the LTE in Rural America program nTelos operated in West Virginia and was bought out and merged with Shentel which was a Sprint Affiliate Mobile virtual network operators MVNOs Edit Sprint Corporation provided capacity on its CDMA2000 EVDO and LTE wireless networks to mobile virtual network operators MVNOs which allowed other wireless providers to utilize its networks to offer its services Sprint s prepaid brands operated using Sprint s networks though they were not MVNOs but rather wholly owned prepaid subsidiaries of the company Bring Your Own Sprint Device Edit Sprint Corporation allowed certain Sprint MVNOs to accept and activate old Sprint branded phones through its Bring Your Own Sprint Device program which was established for Sprint s initiative to further reduce the number of cell phones that were thrown away each year The program was also beneficial to MVNOs customers who did not want to pay subsidized prices 87 Custom Branded Device Program Edit Sprint Corporation offered its MVNOs a program called the Custom Branded Device Program which gave MVNOs access to completely unbranded Android smartphones with no references to Sprint that the MVNO could then customize with its own branded apps and services through Sprint s Mobile ID and Mobile Zone products Though these phones were free of Sprint branding they were certified to run on Sprint networks 88 Data roaming agreements Edit On May 9 2006 Sprint Nextel and Alltel agreed on a new Nationwide Roaming partnership 89 90 It was reciprocal and gave Alltel customers access to the Sprint 1x and EV DO network and Sprint customers access to Alltel s denser rural 1x and EV DO voice and data network The roaming reciprocity agreement between Alltel and Sprint was set to expire in 2016 Sprint and Verizon Wireless had a reciprocal data roaming agreement 91 that allowed for the use of Sprint Power Vision content like TV movie downloads and stream radio in Verizon 1x and EVDO coverage areas Sprint also had a reciprocal 1xRTT EVDO and LTE data and voice roaming agreement with U S Cellular Sprint had an LTE roaming agreement with AT amp T as well which was typically limited to 3G speeds Several cases of Sprint phones simultaneously roaming on Verizon s CDMA network for voice and AT amp T s LTE network for data were observed in 2017 In 2018 with the announcement of the Sprint and T Mobile merger Sprint gained access to roaming on T Mobile s LTE network for 4 years Roaming on T Mobile was counted as native data usage and had no speed restrictions Wireless networks EditFurther information CDMA frequency bands LTE frequency bands and 5G NR frequency bands The following is a list of known CDMA LTE and NR frequencies which Sprint employed in the United States Frequency Band Band Number Protocol Generation Status Notes800 MHzSec 800 MHz 10 IS 95 1xRTT EVDO 1X Advanced 2G 3G Decommissioned Sprint s CDMA network was completely shut down on May 31 2022 92 93 94 1 9 GHz PCS 1700 MHz Upper CBlock 13 LTE LTE A 4G Limited to Puerto Rico and the USVI Previously operated under the Open Mobile brand 95 Sprint s LTE network was completely shut down on June 30 2022 96 850 MHz E CLR 26 Sprint s LTE network was completely shut down on June 30 2022 96 1 9 GHz E PCS 252 5 GHz BRS EBS 415 2 GHz U NII 462 5 GHz BRS EBS n41 NR 5G Sprint s 5G network was shut down by T Mobile on July 1 2020 97 CDMA Edit Sierra Wireless AirCard 550 modem for connecting a laptop to Sprint s PCS Vision network Sprint operated a nationwide CDMA network in the 1 9 GHz PCS band In 2006 Sprint s EV DO Power Vision network reached more than 190 million people Sprint then continued to upgrade their 3G EV DO network until it reached 260 million people in 2007 Sprint eventually covered over 300 million PoPs with EV DO services Sprint added eHRPD to its network EV DO routed through an LTE core network in order to facilitate smooth handoffs between LTE and EV DO As a result of the Merger with T Mobile US Sprint s CDMA network was completely shut down on May 31 2022 92 93 94 LTE Edit On July 28 2011 Sprint announced that it had decided to end its rollout of the 4G network using WiMAX technology in favor of more internationally accepted LTE technology Sprint had also announced that it entered into a 15 year agreement that included spectrum hosting network services 4G wholesale and 3G roaming with LightSquared That deal however was later dissolved due to regulatory issues which LightSquared was unable to resolve with the FCC 98 Sprint announced initial LTE deployment plans at the Sprint Strategy Update conference on October 7 2011 Network Vision partner Samsung began LTE deployments on October 27 2011 in Chicago Illinois 99 Sprint projected that the LTE network would cover 123 million people in 2012 and over 250 million people by the end of 2013 On January 5 2012 Sprint announced via Twitter its first 4G LTE markets that included Atlanta Dallas Houston and San Antonio on June 27 2012 Sprint stated that it would launch its new 4G LTE network in the first five markets the following month and on July 15 2012 Sprint commenced operating the LTE network In addition to the five announced markets it was launched in 10 other markets with more markets to be covered by the end of the year 100 Sprint initially deployed LTE in the 1900 MHz PCS G block and over time added LTE to its 1900 MHz PCS A F block spectrum Sprint also deployed LTE in the 850 MHz E CLR band and the 2500 MHz BRS EBS band In February 2013 Sprint s Prepaid Group which operated Virgin Mobile USA and Boost Mobile began offering products and services using Sprint s LTE network 101 On April 15 2016 it was reported that Sprint covered more than 300 million PoPs with LTE services 102 Sprint eventually rolled out VoLTE although the deployment was initially limited to select markets iOS devices newer than the iPhone 8 as well as a few select Android flagship devices supported VoLTE on Sprint VoLTE and Wi Fi Calling are interoperable and devices can transfer calls between the two networks Calls initiated on Wi Fi by non VoLTE devices will transfer calls to the LTE network if Wi Fi coverage becomes too weak to sustain the call although they are unable to initiate calls on LTE As a result of the Merger with T Mobile US the Sprint LTE network was shut down on June 30 2022 96 Wireless products and services EditMobile devices Edit Sprint offered a variety of wireless and mobile broadband products from a full range of manufacturers that were preloaded with mobile operating systems including Google s Android or Apple s iOS Sprint s partner device manufactures included Apple BlackBerry HTC Kyocera LG Motorola Samsung Sharp Sonim and ZTE Broadband for the home via Sprint Mobile Edit In order to offer broadband directly to the home Sprint launched a co branded Broadband 103 Wireless Access Point device along with Linksys a unit of Cisco Systems This unit allowed Sprint customers to set up a special network in a home or office computer network connecting multiple computers or laptops wirelessly to Sprint s PowerVision network This broadband service to the Internet allowed some customers to have broadband without paying for telephone service The PowerVision router allowed one to bypass the local telephone and cable broadband service providers Such Broadband offerings to the home or office without cable or DSL meant the router could be used to provide cheaper VoIP services through Sprint s high speed network Sprint Music Plus Edit On October 31 2005 the Sprint Music Store was launched Initial record label participation included EMI Music Sony BMG Music Entertainment Warner Music Group and Universal Music Group On November 1 2006 after one year of service the store had sold more than 8 million songs partly thanks to the five free songs it offered customers at launch 104 On April 1 2007 the Sprint Music Store started offering music downloads at the price of 99 cents per track to customers who agreed to subscribe to a Vision pack of 15 or higher The service was rebranded as Sprint Music Plus in 2011 managed by RealNetworks 105 It offered full track music files from various labels albums and single tracks ringback tones and ringtones From July 2013 Sprint Music Plus app was managed by OnMobile Global a company headquartered in Bangalore India citation needed Google Play Edit On May 16 2012 Sprint began to allow subscribers to bill application purchases from Google Play to their phone account 106 Sprint Airave and Magic Box Edit On September 17 2007 Sprint Nextel launched the Airave which increased cell reception over an area of 5 000 square feet 460 m2 and could handle up to three calls at once by hooking into an existing broadband connection and using VOIP The Airave helped eliminate poor signal quality inside buildings Airave was used only for voice calls using a Sprint CDMA phone and was unavailable for Nextel iDEN phones or data cards USB modems By default the Airave unit allowed any Sprint phone to connect through it but it could be reconfigured to accept only connections from up to 50 authorized numbers in order to eliminate unwanted use The Airrave used the customers own bandwidth to connect calls potentially slowing internet speeds on less ample connections and causing the customer to essentially subsidize the Sprint network 107 Sprint was one of the only carriers that had not charged its customers for this type of device if the customer demonstrated that Sprint coverage was inadequate where they lived Airave 2 0 was a device that supported up to six devices simultaneously and data usage The device required a land based internet service such as DSL or cable modem to produce the CDMA signal The Airave 2 5 improved reliability and had two LAN ports 108 Airave 3 0 was a device that broadcast both CDMA and LTE using band 41 that was approved by the FCC in late 2016 109 and became available in 2017 110 It required a cable internet connection and included a WAN RJ45 port and two RJ45 ethernet LAN ports The Magic Box created its own Band 41 LTE signal and used Band 41 or Band 25 LTE signals instead of a cable connection for the internet It was designed to be placed on a window sill and broadcast to the inside of a building plus outside the building for 100 meters or further 111 Defunct brands and networks EditCLEAR Edit Main article Clearwire CLEAR was the brand of mobile broadband services offered by Clearwire Corporation which was acquired by Sprint Nextel in July 2013 The brand provided mobile and fixed wireless broadband communications services to retail and wholesale customers in Belgium Spain and the United States Sprint ended the CLEAR brand in September 2013 shortly after it closed its acquisition of Clearwire and it no longer offers CLEAR branded products and services to new customers 112 Common Cents Mobile Edit Sprint Nextel began offering pre paid wireless products and services via wholly owned MVNO Common Cents Mobile on May 13 2010 113 Sprint Nextel intended these products and services as a lower cost alternative charging 07 per minute for voice calls with round down timing and 07 per text message The products and services were initially available through Walmart stores Sprint Nextel had planned to expand the distribution of Common Cents Mobile to other outlets but never did 114 On May 18 2011 Sprint Nextel discontinued operating its Common Cents Mobile pre paid brand on the basis it was a duplicate of the offerings of the Virgin Mobile USA PayLo brand Common Cents Mobile customers were transitioned to a Virgin Mobile payLo service plan that allowed the former Common Cents Mobile customers to keep their existing 07 per minute rate 114 115 116 Nextel Direct Connect Edit Sprint Nextel decided to decommission the iDEN Nextel National network it had acquired after merging with Nextel Communications in order to repurpose the network for LTE coverage Sprint stopped offering Nextel Direct Connect walkie talkie service Instead Sprint persuades many of its customers into their replacement service Sprint Direct Connect which operates on the CDMA network Virgin Mobile and Assurance Wireless Edit Main article Virgin Mobile USA Virgin Mobile USA L P was a wholly owned subsidiary of Sprint Corporation and provided nationwide prepaid wireless voice messaging and broadband data products and services to customers in the contiguous United States under the Virgin Mobile payLo and Assurance Wireless Brought to You by Virgin Mobile brands It operated as an MVNO and provided services to its customers via the Sprint owned CDMA EVDO WiMAX and LTE networks 117 Virgin Mobile USA L P also offered lifeline telephone service subsidized by the U S Federal Communications Commission s Universal Service Fund under the Assurance Wireless Brought to You by Virgin Mobile brand The program offers a free wireless phone and 250 free local and domestic long distance voice minutes per month to eligible low income customers in 31 states End users do not receive a bill nor are they required to sign a contract and do not pay activation fees recurring fees or surcharges 118 Discontinued networks Edit iDEN Edit Sprint Nextel operated an iDEN nationwide network in the 800 MHz and 900 MHz SMR frequency band Sprint Corporation acquired the iDEN network as a result of its merger with Nextel Communications in 2005 The iDEN network was originally deployed as a dispatch radio service and is unique in blending the half duplex push to talk one to many broadcast capability of a walkie talkie with the one to one private communication of a phone Sprint later marketed push to talk services under the Nextel Direct Connect name In October 2010 as part of the Network Vision plan Sprint CEO Dan Hesse announced the decommissioning of the iDEN network to reduce costs improve the coverage and performance of the 3G CDMA network and enable Sprint Nextel to focus on 4G LTE technology Sprint Nextel announced on May 29 2012 that it will stop marketing iDEN devices in the third quarter of 2012 and that the iDEN network could be completely decommissioned as early as June 30 2013 119 As of June 5 2012 Sprint and Boost Mobile ceased offering iDEN devices removing the devices and their associated service plans from the Sprint and Boost Mobile websites and retail locations The Nextel national network was shut down on schedule at 12 01 am on June 30 2013 Radio frequency range Band number Generation Radio Interface Status800 MHz ESMR N A 2G iDEN Decommissioned900 MHz ESMR 120 121 N A 2G iDEN DecommissionedWiMAX Edit Sprint Corporation operated a 4G WiMAX network in the 2 5 GHz band which had been operated by Clearwire Corporation before it was acquired Sprint also provided its prepay partners Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile access to data services via the WiMAX network including other Mobile virtual network operators under wholesale agreements Sprint Nextel had won rights to radio spectrum in the 2 5 GHz band to provision fourth generation services and began to build out a WiMAX network offering services under the Xohm brand However on May 7 2008 Sprint Nextel announced it would merge its WiMAX wireless broadband unit with Clearwire Corporation receiving equity in Clearwire in return The two companies completed the transaction on November 28 2008 122 Sprint became the owner of Clearwire after outbidding Dish Network for the company On October 8 2008 Sprint Nextel launched WiMAX in Baltimore and showed off several new laptops that will have embedded WiMAX chips They announced that Sprint will be offering dual mode 3G 4G products by the end of the year Baltimore was the first city to get Xohm but it was launched soon after in more cities such as Chicago and Philadelphia 123 On April 19 2011 Sprint Nextel announced it agreed to pay at least 1 billion to Clearwire so it can operate on the 4G WiMAX network through 2012 and a later agreement announced in December 2011 specified terms allowing Sprint its subsidiaries and wholesale customers to continue having access to the Clearwire 4G WiMAX network through 2015 On July 9 2013 Sprint Nextel acquired the remaining stock shares it did not already own in Clearwire and its assets 124 Sprint Corporation is working on migrating WiMAX customers to LTE compatible devices in order to begin transitioning the WiMAX bands to TDD LTE In July 2013 Sprint announced its first tri band products capable of accessing TDD LTE data connections in the 2 5 GHz band still used for WiMAX 125 Sprint planned to shut its WiMAX network on November 6 2015 however an emergency injunction was granted by a judge of the Massachusetts Superior Court on November 5 2015 to keep the WiMax network online for another 90 days due to the ongoing lawsuit from non profit groups The groups Mobile Beacon and Mobile Citizen said that the network shutdown violates the contract which requires Sprint to provide high speed internet services for low income families and public institutions as most of the equipment was still not LTE compatible Sprint pledged to provide upgrades to the equipment and work out a solution with the groups as soon as possible Most of the WiMax network not running in the affected areas were shut down 126 On February 1 2016 the same court declared that Sprint can proceed with the network shutdown in the remaining 75 cities Sprint took the network of 16 cities including New York City offline on February 2 2016 and closed 39 more on February 29 2016 On March 31 2016 the last 25 cities networks were shut down 127 Controversies EditDevice unlocking Edit For devices launched after February 15 2015 Sprint unlocked phones when Lease Service Billing Agreements were satisfied and accounts were in good standing 128 For devices launched before February 15 2015 Sprint did not authorize the use of GSM capable devices including both phones and tablets it sold on a United States based competitor s network such as T Mobile or AT amp T 129 Unlike the aforementioned companies which have comparatively lenient policies about unlocking phones such as when the device is paid off or the contract is fulfilled and Verizon whose GSM capable devices ship with the GSM portion already unlocked Sprint only unlocked devices for international use for customers in good standing after contacting customer support 130 This limitation meant phones and tablets sold by Sprint that were launched prior to February 15 2015 only lawfully functioned on the Sprint network a policy that prevented what may have otherwise been compatibility with another carrier s network Additionally iPhones sold by Sprint generally had the lowest resale value of devices sold by the top four carriers in the US 131 Means to unlock a GSM capable iPhone existed such as using a SIM interposer but the device may not have functioned fully or correctly on the desired network and unlocking of the device was a violation of the law under the terms of the DMCA up until August 1 2014 when President Obama signed into law a bill allowing the unlocking of cell phones 132 FCC fine over Do Not Call rule breaches Edit In May 2014 the company was fined 7 5 million by the U S Federal Communications Commission for failing to honor consumer requests to opt out of marketing messages delivered by phone and text messages Sprint was ordered to implement a comprehensive two year plan to comply with the commission s rules including training of Sprint employees on how to comply with Do Not Call rules American consumers have had the option of nominating not to receive telemarketing calls and texts since 2003 by placing their names on the National Do Not Call Registry 133 Law compliance Edit As required by law in the United States in response to court orders and warrants Sprint Nextel provided law enforcement agencies with its wireless subscribers GPS locations over 8 million times in one year between September 2008 and October 2009 134 The disclosures occurred by way of a special secure portal which Sprint developed specifically for government officials which enabled users to automatically obtain Sprint customers GPS locations after the request has been reviewed and activated by Sprint s surveillance department 135 Marketing EditAdvertising Edit In 2016 Sprint began a major television advertising campaign that promoted its reliability as being within 1 of other major providers such as Verizon The advertisements featured Paul Marcarelli an American actor once known for pitching Verizon with the phrase Can you hear me now In the ads Marcarelli noted that he had switched to Sprint and touted pricing of approximately half that of other providers commenting Can you hear that The ads featured the slogan Don t let a 1 difference cost you twice as much 136 Sponsorships Edit Film Edit Sprint cellphones were product placed in such movies such as Men in Black II 2002 The Departed 2006 Dan in Real Life 2007 Superbad 2007 Wild Hogs 2007 27 Dresses 2008 Baby Mama 2008 Beverly Hills Chihuahua 2008 Eagle Eye 2008 The Spiderwick Chronicles 2008 Sex and the City film 2008 Alvin and the Chipmunks The Squeakquel 2009 Bride Wars 2009 Transformers Revenge of the Fallen 2009 and The Gambler 2014 Sprint was also featured in Baywatch film 2017 by Dwayne The Rock Johnson s character Mitch Music Edit Sprint was the official wireless sponsor of the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards Sprint Power Vision customers were able to watch the VMAs on a live simulcast on their Sprint Power Vision handset free of charge Sports Edit In Time Magazine s November 13 2006 issue Sprint Nextel s NASCAR FanView was named One of Best Inventions of 2006 137 The NASCAR FanView is a portable PDA that runs on Sprint s data network The device offers fans access to Race telecast and up to seven in car camera channels direct audio feeds allowing the user to listen to live driver and team conversations as well as the radio broadcast and an exclusive audio replay feature From 2008 to 2016 Sprint Corporation was the major title sponsor of NASCAR s top racing series formerly called the NEXTEL Cup which became known as the Sprint Cup Series on February 9 2008 138 Since then Sprint signed a contract extension with NASCAR to continue sponsoring the series through the 2016 season 139 Sprint was replaced by Monster Energy after the 2016 season 140 Sprint Corporation held the naming rights to the Sprint Center in Kansas City Missouri after the merger in 2020 the arena was renamed the T Mobile Center not to be confused with T Mobile Arena in Las Vegas 141 Sprint Nextel announced in December 2011 that it reached a multi year exclusive partnership with the National Basketball Association NBA to be the league s official wireless service partner 142 Sprint was also a sponsor for the Copa America Centenario in 2016 143 Television Edit Sprint was a sponsor of the Fox television series 24 and Fringe citation needed Sprint was a major sponsor of the NBC television series Heroes and provided exclusive web content to subscribers Sprint was also the mobile sponsor of NBC s The Voice citation needed Sprint was a major sponsor of competition reality shows such as Big Brother and Survivor on CBS which enabled viewers to vote each week for Player of the Game citation needed See also EditOpen Handset Alliance SoftBank CorporationReferences Edit History of Sprint Corporation FundingUniverse Retrieved December 13 2018 Sprint Corporation 2019 Annual Report Form 10 K sec gov U S Securities and Exchange Commission May 29 2019 Retrieved July 29 2019 Sprint Newsroom newsroom sprint com Retrieved July 26 2019 Strategic Acquisition of Sprint SoftBank co jp June 11 2013 Retrieved June 30 2013 10 K sec gov Retrieved June 1 2019 Gruley Bryan amp Moritz Scott January 26 2016 Inside the Plan to Pull Sprint Out of Its Death Spiral A Japanese billionaire and a Bolivian telecom vet think they know how to fix the ailing company Bloomberg Businessweek a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link MarceloClaure Twitter Retrieved May 31 2018 Aiello Chloe May 2 2018 Sprint names Michel Combes as CEO and Marcelo Claure as executive chairman CNBC Retrieved November 25 2018 T Mobile and Sprint s merger is officially complete Retrieved April 1 2020 Bellevue Washington Overl Park April 1 Kansas 2020 T Mobile Completes Merger with Sprint to Create the New T Mobile www t mobile com Retrieved April 1 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link What the T Mobile amp Sprint Merger Means for You T Mobile www t mobile com Retrieved April 1 2020 T Mo and Sprint will unify under the T Mobile brand on August 2 Retrieved July 16 2020 T Mobile Unveils Latest Un carrier Move Scam Shield A Massive Set of Free Solutions to Protect Customers From Rampant Scams and Robocalls T Mobile Newsroom T Mobile Newsroom Retrieved July 16 2020 a b c Sprint Born From Railroad Telephone Businesses NPR org Retrieved October 15 2018 Inside the Plan to Pull Sprint Out of Its Death Spiral Bloomberg Businessweek January 26 2016 Retrieved October 15 2018 a b c Glashauser Georgia 2007 Bicycle from Sea to Shining Sea British Columbia Trafford Publishing p 76 a b c d e f Johnston David Cay April 15 1997 Paul Henson 71 Pioneer In Fiber Optic Phones at Sprint The New York Times Retrieved October 15 2018 Sprint Says Former Chief Paul H Henson Has Died Wall Street Journal April 14 1997 Retrieved October 15 2018 Independent Phone Group Elects The New York Times October 23 1964 Retrieved October 15 2018 a b Hollie Pamela G April 9 1979 Southern Pacific Takes on Bell The New York Times Retrieved October 15 2018 Hollie Pamela G April 9 1979 Southern Pacific Takes on Bell Business Day The New York Times Retrieved September 24 2018 a b Block Melissa Neff Brijet October 15 2012 Sprint Born From Railroad Telephone Businesses NPR Archived from the original on October 24 2012 Retrieved January 14 2013 NEFF They decided to hold a contest after we were able to prove that everything worked and the winning title was Sprint which stood for Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Networking Telephony Bonner Raymond October 2 1982 GTE TO BUY SPRINT PHONE SYSTEM The New York Times Retrieved October 23 2018 Justice Dept supports GTE Sprint merger UPI Retrieved October 23 2018 a b GTE United Telecommunications Merge Long Distance Businesses AP NEWS Retrieved February 4 2020 GTE Telecom Join Forces Washington Post January 17 1986 ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved October 23 2018 Sims Calvin July 19 1988 GTE to Sell Telecom More of Sprint The New York Times Retrieved October 23 2018 Bradsher Keith April 18 1990 United Telecom to Buy All of U S Sprint The New York Times Retrieved October 23 2018 Turner Tyya N Firm Vault 2005 Vault Guide to the Top Telecom Employers Vault Inc ISBN 9781581313215 Desk FP Tech May 18 2013 The short history of telecom startups in Canada Financial Post Financial Post Retrieved April 26 2019 John Shmuel May 18 2013 The short history of telecom startups in Canada Financial Post Yates Ronald E SPRINT CENTEL MERGER COMPLETE DESPITE FEARS chicagotribune com Retrieved October 29 2018 Wasserstein Bruce February 28 2009 Big Deal Mergers and Acquisitions in the Digital Age Grand Central Publishing ISBN 9780446556378 Services From Times Wire March 17 1998 Alltel to Acquire 360 Communications Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved October 29 2018 Verizon completes Alltel purchase CNET January 9 2009 Retrieved October 29 2018 Sprint www sprint com Retrieved October 14 2021 a b c d e Ribbing Mark Digital wireless pioneer APC sells its holdings dissolves Sprint Spectrum network fully owned by Sprint PCS baltimoresun com Retrieved June 2 2020 Wyatt Edward June 24 1999 Voicestream and Omnipoint Announce 3 Billion Merger The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 2 2020 Marshall Jonathan September 24 1997 RadioShack Sprint Team Up Phone outlets to open today inside retailer SFGate Retrieved April 26 2019 MCI buys Sprint for 129B Oct 5 1999 money cnn com Retrieved April 26 2019 Romero Simon July 14 2000 WorldCom and Sprint End Their 115 Billion Merger The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 26 2019 Sprint brings PCS FON shares back together Feb 29 2004 money cnn com Retrieved April 26 2019 Lawsuits filed over PCS tracking stock RCR Wireless News November 30 1999 Retrieved April 26 2019 Kane Margaret Sprint Nextel agree to 35 billion merger CNET Retrieved April 26 2019 CNN Money Sprint Nextel in 36B merger December 15 2004 Retrieved February 6 2018 Charny Ben Sprint Nextel shareholders approve merger CNET Retrieved April 26 2019 Journal Shawn Young and Amy SchatzStaff Reporters of The Wall Street August 4 2005 FCC Approves Sprint Nextel Merger Agreement Wall Street Journal Retrieved April 26 2019 Sprint Nextel complete merger Lewiston Sun Journal August 13 2005 Retrieved July 28 2020 a b Taylor Paul August 30 2005 Sprint Nextel to buy two regional affiliates Financial Times Archived from the original on December 11 2022 Retrieved July 28 2020 Sprint CWA Reach Deal Over Embarq Spinoff Wall Street Journal February 13 2006 Retrieved February 13 2006 Malik Om February 28 2008 Sprint Writes Down Nextel Posts 29 5 Billion Loss Gigaom p 1 Retrieved July 9 2011 Harrison Crayton February 28 2008 Sprint Posts 29 5 Billion Loss on Nextel Writedown Bloomberg L P Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved July 9 2011 T Mobile to buy Shentel wireless assets for 1 95B February 2 2021 Retrieved July 31 2022 T Mobile ties up another Sprint loose end with Swiftel buy January 5 2021 Retrieved July 31 2022 Sprint to Acquire Wireless Affiliate US Unwired for 1 3B Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 D Errico Richard August 30 2005 Sprint Nextel to acquire IWO Holdings in 427M cash deal www bizjournals com Retrieved February 4 2020 Sprint Nextel Completes Acquisition of IWO Holdings Inc www businesswire com October 20 2005 Retrieved February 4 2020 Sprint Nextel Completes Acquisition of Wireless Affiliate Alamosa Holdings on February 1 2006 Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 Sprint Nextel Acquires Enterprise Communications on January 31 2006 Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 Sprint Nextel Completes Acquisition of Velocita Wireless on February 28 2006 Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 Velocita Wireless L P July 2 2007 United Wireless Acquires Velocita Wireless L P Retrieved August 6 2015 Sprint Nextel Completes Acquisition of Nextel Partners on June 26 2006 Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 Sprint Nextel Completes Acquisition of Ubiquitel on July 7 2006 Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 Sprint Nextel Concludes Acquisition of Affiliate Northern PCS Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 Sprint Nextel To Acquire Virgin Mobile USA Newsreleases sprint com Archived from the original on July 15 2012 Retrieved July 11 2011 By Phil Goldstein FierceWireless Sprint to buy iPCS for 831M October 19 2009 Retrieved October 24 2016 Cauley Leslie February 10 2008 Sprint CEO Aims for Winning Strategy USA Today Gannett Co Retrieved May 24 2012 Softbank to Buy 70 Percent Stake in Sprint Sources CNBC Retrieved October 14 2012 Segan Sascha October 15 2012 What Softbank Buying Sprint Means to You PCMag com Retrieved October 18 2012 Dieter Bohn July 5 2013 FCC officially approves SoftBank buyout of Sprint and Sprint buyout of Clearwire The Verge Retrieved July 11 2013 Additional Purchases of Sprint Corporation Shares SoftBank Group Retrieved August 6 2015 Reisinger Dan November 7 2012 Sprint Inks 480 Million Deal for U S Cellular Customers Spectrum Retrieved December 22 2012 Sprint opens stores within 1 435 RadioShack locations Computerworld April 9 2015 Retrieved April 10 2015 Brickley Peg March 31 2015 RadioShack Rescue Deal Clears Bankruptcy Court Wall Street Journal Retrieved April 10 2015 Vincent James January 23 2017 Sprint just bought 33 percent of Jay Z s Tidal streaming service The Verge Retrieved January 23 2017 Sprint Nextel Corporation Seeking Alpha Retrieved May 21 2012 Sprint enables 100G Ethernet wavelength services sets path for 400G August 15 2013 Retrieved July 25 2016 Sprint launches wireline business division taps company veteran Fitz to lead division May 9 2016 Retrieved July 25 2016 Paula Bernier July 15 2008 Sprint Moves to 40G with Cisco s IPoDWDM Solution Xchangemag com Archived from the original on August 18 2008 Retrieved March 16 2010 Matsumoto Craig Sprint Picks Ciena for 400G Light Reading Retrieved June 16 2022 Sprint finds utility in Ethernet access for growing IP MPLS service Retrieved July 25 2016 Sprint ropes in Ethernet over Copper Ethernet over DOCSIS into Ethernet strategy May 15 2016 Retrieved July 25 2016 Web Services Home webservicesconsole sprint com Sprint Powers the Los Angeles Police Department s Connected Officer Program Sprint Newsroom newsroom sprint com Retrieved August 25 2016 http transition fcc gov Daily Releases Daily Business 2016 db0824 DA 16 963A1 pdf bare URL PDF Swiftel net Quality reliable amp local phone TV Internet service is what we do Retrieved August 6 2015 Sprint Gives MVNOs an Alternative to Phone Subsidies Through Bring Your Own Sprint Device Program Sprint Newsroom Newsroom sprint com Archived from the original on May 22 2013 Retrieved July 11 2013 Sprint Introduces Custom Branded Device Program Enabling MVNOs to Custom Brand White Label Android Phones Sprint Newsroom Newsroom sprint com Archived from the original on August 6 2013 Retrieved July 11 2013 Sprint News Release Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 Verizon Fios amp Custom TV Internet Cable amp Phone www verizon com Archived from the original on June 19 2006 Sprint U Can Get Their Data Served Verizon style Engadget AOL Retrieved July 11 2011 a b Sprint s CDMA network shutdown softbank jp Retrieved April 13 2022 a b Updated Phased Shutdown T Mobile Delays Final Sprint 3G CDMA Shutdown Once Again tmo report March 30 2022 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2015 Retrieved August 6 2015 Dan Meyer RCSWireless Sprint LTE Plus network takes on New York City 190 other markets April 15 2016 Retrieved January 23 2018 Linksys Is Now Available on Our Cisco Home Networking Website linksys com Retrieved November 19 2010 Nation s First Over the Air Song Download Service Celebrates One Year Anniversary Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 Real Networks to manage Sprint ringtones music San Diego Union Tribune February 11 2010 Retrieved May 2 2018 Chris Parsons 2012 Sprint customers in the US can now pay for all Google Play Store purchases using carrier billing Android Central Chris Parsons Retrieved April 22 2013 AIRRAVE Access Point FAQs PDF Sprint Retrieved January 15 2016 Samsung s AIRAVE Femtocell for Sprint Mobile Phones PhoneHint Mobilecomment com Archived from the original on January 7 2009 Retrieved March 16 2010 FCC ID QHY S1000C CDMA 1X amp EVDO TD LTE and Dual Band Wi Fi Small Cell by CommScope Technologies LLC R Sprint I got the new Airave 3 LTE Here are some pictures May 17 2017 What s in the Box Oh oh oh it s Magic Wireless Internet Mobile 4G Wireless Internet Access from Sprint Archived from the original on August 7 2015 Retrieved August 6 2015 Ziegler Chris May 13 2010 Common Cents Mobile becomes Sprint s Latest Prepaid Brand Exclusive to Walmart Engadget AOL Archived from the original on December 7 2012 Retrieved December 23 2012 That new prepaid business for the anti power user crowd that Sprint was fixing to launch Yeah it s here and it s official meet Common Cents Mobile a b Dano Mike April 8 2011 Sprint Discontinues Common Cents Mobile Prepaid Brand FierceWireless FierceMarkets Archived from the original on April 4 2013 Retrieved December 22 2012 Sprint Nextel NYSE S said it will fold its Common Cents Mobile prepaid brand into its Virgin Mobile payLo offering in May a move that brings to an end a brand Sprint launched less than a year ago Common Cents Mobile Common Cents Mobile July 8 2011 Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved July 8 2011 As of May 18 2011 Common Cents Mobile has officially become payLo by Virgin Mobile Sprint Nextel Folds New Common Cents Brand into Virgin Mobile Product Kansas City Business Journal American City Business Journals April 8 2011 Archived from the original on February 28 2013 Retrieved December 22 2012 Sprint Nextel Corp is rolling its fledgling Common Cents Mobile brand into its payLo by Virgin Mobile offering The official change is set for May 18 Sprint NYSE S spokeswoman Melinda Tiemeyer said Friday Coverage Map Cell Phone Coverage from Virgin Mobile Virgin Mobile USA January 1 1990 Archived from the original on June 3 2012 Retrieved October 11 2012 Cell Phone Program FAQs Retrieved August 6 2015 Sprint to cease service on its iDEN network as early as June 30 2013 Company continues to facilitate migration of iDEN customers to Sprint Direct Connect Service Sprint Newsroom Newsroom sprint com Archived from the original on August 23 2013 Retrieved July 11 2013 Sprint sells 900 MHz spectrum to firm led by Nextel co founders Retrieved July 25 2016 Sprint Nextel looks to 900 MHz band to ease iDEN capacity constrains RCR Wireless News October 25 2006 Retrieved July 25 2016 Clearwire Completes Landmark Transaction with Sprint Nextel to Combine 4G Mobile WiMAX Businesses Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved August 6 2015 Reardon Marguerite October 8 2008 With WiMax Sprint Cuts the Cord in Baltimore CNET CBS Interactive Retrieved March 16 2010 Donald van Deventer Seeking Alpha Sprint Bonds Dramatic Progress But More To Do January 13 2014 Retrieved July 16 2018 Neal Gompa Extreme Tech Sprint turns on LTE TDD allowing it to compete with AT amp T and Verizon s coverage and performance July 23 2013 Retrieved March 14 2017 Sprint WiMAX shutdown delayed by court order in victory for nonprofits Ars Technica November 6 2015 Retrieved December 6 2015 Court Sprint can begin to kill WiMAX network this week Fierce Wireless February 2016 Retrieved February 10 2016 Unlocking your Sprint device Retrieved April 17 2020 Legal Regulatory amp Consumer Resources Retrieved August 6 2015 Unlocking GSM capable devices Retrieved December 23 2013 Stenovec Timothy September 20 2013 How To Sell Your Old iPhone 6 Ways To Trade In Your Phone Huffington Post Retrieved December 23 2013 Bessler Abigail Obama signs bill unlocking cell phones CBS News Retrieved August 1 2014 Regulator fines Sprint 7 5mn for not screening unwanted calls United States News Net Archived from the original on May 20 2014 Retrieved May 20 2014 Surveillance Shocker Sprint Received 8 MILLION Law Enforcement Requests for GPS Data in the Past Year Eff org December 1 2009 Retrieved July 11 2011 Surveillance Shocker Sprint Received 8 MILLION Law Enforcement Requests for GPS Location Data in the Past Year Electronic Frontier Foundation December 2009 Retrieved December 1 2009 Baig Edward June 6 2016 Verizon s Can you hear me now guy now at Sprint USA Today Retrieved September 23 2016 NASCAR NEXTEL FanView Named One of the Best Inventions 2006 by TIME Magazine Sprint press release November 9 2006 NASCAR s Premier Series To Be Named NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Beginning July 7 2007 Sprint Nextel Retrieved July 11 2011 Caraviello David December 3 2011 Sprint extends deal with NASCAR through 2016 NASCAR Turner Sports Retrieved January 2 2013 Monster Energy replaces Sprint as title sponsor for NASCAR s top series USA Today December 1 2016 Retrieved December 1 2016 Sprint buys arena naming rights Lawrence Journal World Retrieved July 23 2004 NBA joins Sprint in new multiyear marketing partnership NBA com Retrieved December 14 2011 Chris Smith Forbes Copa America Centenario Coca Cola Sprint And State Farm Join As Official Sponsors February 29 2016 Retrieved March 14 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sprint Corporation Official website Archive Wireless Historical business data for Sprint Corporation SEC filings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sprint Corporation amp oldid 1129708717, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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