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World Cup Tech Test: Networks Hold Up | Tech News
Description
The World Cup packed Santa Clara’s 68,000-seat stadium, testing mobile networks under fire as tens of thousands of fans streamed photos, videos, and even made international calls in real time. Carriers like Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile responded with massive upgrades—thousands of antennas, 5G boosts, and portable towers—to handle the data tsunami. Tests during a Paraguay vs. Australia match showed mostly flawless performance: instant uploads, crystal-clear video calls to Australia and Germany, and even a premium “Turbo Live” service from AT&T. The only glitch? A shaky LA call—blamed on local congestion, not stadium signal. Verizon anticipated 50 terabytes of data per game—equivalent to streaming every Netflix movie at once—and pulled off the feat. Fans could finally share the roar without buffering.
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