London underground: no mobile trials imminent

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The long-awaited trials to use your mobile phone on London’s underground tube network will not start in the near future according to a source at Transport for London.
The trials, which were set to start April 2008 at the earliest, have been delayed due to talks continuing with infrastructure providers.
“The trials are due to take place,” confirmed the source. “We haven’t got a definite date though, as discussions are still ongoing with regards to the mobile phone coverage.
“The basis of the trials was to see if the technology was out there to work at a deep level, as 60 per cent of the tube network is overground already.”
Mystery players
Among those rumoured to be involved in the project were BT and O2, the former especially likely as they are the communications partner for the London 2012 Olympics.
However, a call to BT yielded nothing more than a bland "We can’t comment on rumours.”
O2 also said they had no current involvement, despite being part of the network deployment of Airwave, designed for emergency radio connectivity on the underground, and were involved in similar trials in Scotland.
“We have no concrete plans to get involved in this trial, though we would be open to talks,” confirmed the mobile phone network provider.
Hang on… I’m going into a tunnel…
The trials were initially meant to be just on the platforms to help remove the chance of someone next to you screeching “I’m just on the tube, nearly home” on their phone.
However, users coming in and out of signal would overload the networks, so a constant connection needs to be maintained, which has contributed to the delays.
“The tunnels are quite confined with a lot of equipment, such as signalling devices, already in there,” confirmed the TfL source.


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