Anyone remember when Q was talking about ZTE and Huawei in China and how they were a problem.
Though some Chinese firms have made inroads in Europe, they have failed to gain traction in the U.S. because of national security concerns. A bill was even introduced in Congress that would ban the U.S. government from doing business with two of China's market leaders, Huawei and ZTE.
https:// m.phys.org/news/2018-03-5g-trump-nix-huge-tech.html
https:// www.zdnet.com/article/trump-administration-tells-fcc-to-block-china-mobile-from-us/
The reasons given for sanctions and what not was stated as national security concerns regarding chinese spying on the US. Which we all know is happening today since Feinstein’s driver was a Chinese spy. Ok this makes sense.
But wait. There’s more. Much more to 5G that perhaps you didn’t think of.
First Here’s everything they want you to know about 5G : https:// m.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&v=GEx_d0SjvS0 short vid
But what is really important is wage length.
Today’s wireless networks have run into a problem: More people and devices are consuming more data than ever before, but it remains crammed on the same bands of the radio-frequency spectrum that mobile providers have always used. That means less bandwidth for everyone, causing slower service and more dropped connections.
One way to get around that problem is to simply transmit signals on a whole new swath of the spectrum, one that’s never been used for mobile service before. That’s why providers are experimenting with broadcasting on millimeter waves, which use higher frequencies than the radio waves that have long been used for mobile phones.
Millimeter waves are broadcast at frequencies between 30 and 300 gigahertz, compared to the bands below 6 GHz that were used for mobile devices in the past. They are called millimeter waves because they vary in length from 1 to 10 mm, compared to the radio waves that serve today’s smartphones, which measure tens of centimeters in length.
https:// spectrum.ieee.org/video/telecom/wireless/5g-bytes-millimeter-waves-explained