August 12, 2005
Iqaluit cell network to go digital
But
no text-messaging, no Blackberries, no advanced features
NUNATSIAQ NEWS
Cell phone reception may improve in Iqaluit by the end of the year with the
advent of a digital network, but service options will still be limited. (PHOTO
BY JIM BELL)
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Iqaluit's cell phone provider will replace its analog cell phone service with
a digital network by the end of the year, but Iqaluit residents still won't
be able to use text-messaging, Blackberry wireless e-mail devices, or other
advanced applications.
But NMI Mobility, the Bell Canada subsidiary that offers cell phone service
in the three northern territories, says the new system will allow them to offer
a caller ID service to Iqaluit cell phone customers, along with better coverage
and better reception.
"It will be more reliable, with more clarity," said Kim Iampen, NMI
Mobility's manager of marketing and communications.
But she said the new digital system won't be advanced enough to support other
services that are common across North America and Europe, such as text messaging
and wireless email.
To do that, Iampen said, NMI must upgrade to an even more advanced type of
digital system called a "1X" network.
Iqaluit is the only community in Nunavut with cell phone coverage.
NMI offers a variety of cell phone plans through one or two-year packaged contracts,
starting at about $20 a month, plus add-ons like voice mail and call waiting.
Their standard charge for air time is 65 cents a minute.
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