As cellular providers protest to the F.C.C. about the ill effects of cellphone boosters on their ability to provide service, the problem of dead areas on the mobile coverage landscape persists. Carriers can peddle their pricey femtocells to their customer base to make up for a flagging home or office signal, but once most cellular customers travel beyond that device’s reach they rely solely on their carrier’s network to maintain any signal connection to their surroundings.
The moving vehicle/open road is no place for a femtocell, let alone a spotty network. It is, however, safe haven for a Wilson Sleek Cell Phone Signal Booster. The signal repeating device from the industry leader in making your phone a viable communication instrument anywhere, has several things going for it in the realm of signal appeal. Unlike network specific femtocells, the easy-to-install Wilson Sleek supports all North American carriers (except Nextel and iDen) operating on both 800MHz and 1900MHz frequency bands, . That means you don’t have to buy a new device if you should change service at any point. It also means that if you’re on a road trip and your navigator (on a different service) thinks their device is more adept at handling GPS navigation duties, they can have their signal boosted too (provided you switch the phone attached).
The Sleek practically eliminates dropped calls on those long drives through mountainous terrain, and keeps your battery fresh since it doesn’t get drained grasping for signal. No femtocell can guarantee that because femtocells aren’t spefically designed to take it to the streets, rather they connect to your wireless router. So even though carriers like Verizon and AT&T are going to try to rid the world of cell phone signal repeaters like the Wilson Sleek, it’s a plain and simple case of jealousy as their devices simply can’t do what the Sleek can.
{ 1 trackback }