Downtown Nashville’s Christmas Day bombing led to significant phone and data service outages and disruptions across hundreds of miles in the S…
Search / 88 results found Showing: 1-10 of 88
Cricket Wireless held a ribbon cutting at their store in Ripley on Friday, Oct. 30. During the ribbon cutting the wireless provider donated Ch…
Major telecommunications conglomerate AT&T has agreed to provide the state of Mississippi records detailing how it used the almost $284 million it was paid by the federal government to expand internet access in the state. AT&T originally denied requests last week for records related to work it completed in the state to provide fixed wireless …
By BECKY GILLETTE With the unprecedented shifts in how business services and education are delivered due to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), demand for high speed internet service has doubled and tripled from uses ranging from more telecommuting to online remote education, said Dave Miller, senior media relations manager for C Spire in Mississippi. Miller …
C Spire is working with Mississippi schools to offer free wireless data for approved learning sites for K-12 students as they prep for school from home during this time, it was announced Monday. “During health emergencies, hurricanes, power outages and daily life, people depend on our wireless services,” said Brian Caraway, general manager of C …
The American economy is strong and expanding. Unemployment is at record lows, inflation is under control, wages are surging for workers, and r…
The 2020s have begun, and this decade has the potential for solid progress. Communities should be able to grow and develop alongside businesse…
By NASH NUNNERY Mississippi-made C Spire, the nation’s largest privately owned mobile services firm, is in the final stages of completing work for the company’s transition to 5G. C Spire announced last month that home and business customers are already experiencing a 15 to 20 percent improvement in mobile broadband speeds based on upgrades to …
New tools are coming to fight robocalls, but don’t expect unwanted calls to disappear. Political gridlock could derail bills aimed at beefing up enforcement and forcing phone companies to do more. The companies have been slow to act against such automated calls on their own. And even if companies do implement better technology, scammers and …