KEY POINTS
  • AT&T is expanding its 5G trials to include three new U.S. cities by the end of the year as part of its push to develop a next-generation network.
  • The No. 2 wireless carrier, which is currently conducting similar trials in Austin, will extend them to Waco, Texas; Kalamazoo, Michigan; and South Bend, Indiana.
  • The trials will test a faster broadband service where the last leg of the connection is delivered via a radio signal using high-band wireless airwaves known as millimeter wave.
An AT&T advance-line technician parks his service truck as he prepares to troubleshoot an aerial cable in Des Plaines, Illinois.

AT&T said on Wednesday that it is expanding its 5G trials to include three new U.S. cities by the end of the year as part of its push to develop a next-generation network.

The trials will test a faster broadband service where the last leg of the connection is delivered via a radio signal to a home or business using high-band wireless airwaves known as millimeter wave. Participants in the trials will be able to stream AT&T's DirecTV Now service over a 5G connection as well as experience shorter lag times for uses such as video conferencing and virtual-reality gaming.