Offloading

Offloading refers to the practice of using a Wi-Fi network to relieve the burden of a heavily used cellular network. Since the introduction and wide acceptance of smartphones and other mobile broadband devices, cellular traffic has dramatically increased to the point where data speeds have become progressively slower and cell phone calls are continually dropped.

The concept of offloading in the cellular industry is relatively new and became a serious consideration to major carriers in early 2011. It's a result of the growing demand of mobile broadband devices and the continued decrease in contiguous spectrum (frequency utilized by cellular devices). This dilemma has become increasingly problematic and is now identified by the FCC as the "Spectrum Crisis."

Offloading services are predicted to increase over 60% by year 2015. That would be in excess of 9000 petabytes of information needing to be offloaded to a Wi-Fi carrier grade network. That is equivalent to11 billion movie downloads.

Strategically placed Wytec technology can provide major networks the ability to coffload onto a CCI designed network. A significant burden will be taken off the major carriers and the network will become faster and more efficient. Through the use of Wytec's patented Multichannel Radio Frequency Transmission (MRFT) technology and the ability to create synthetic contiguous spectrum, CCI will be able to deliver a superior product. This will result in a network with increased data speeds, fewer dropped calls, and the benefit of adding capacity to networks in a cost efficient and flexible manner.