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Dorset's best phone coverage found by bin lorries
Dorset's best phone coverage found by bin lorries

BBC News

time14 hours ago

  • Business
  • BBC News

Dorset's best phone coverage found by bin lorries

An area's best mobile phone coverage providers have been found in a street-by-street survey by bin Council is the latest authority to use devices on waste vehicles to check signal results have been published in an online checker, where users can enter their postcode to find data for the four main council said a previous tool promoted by communications regulator Ofcom was not accurate, while mobile phone company websites could not always be relied on. Thirty-two food waste collection trucks surveyed 2,400 miles of roads, the council vehicles carried equipment from technology firm Streetwave to check coverage by EE, O2, Three and Vodafone, as well as download found less than half of the area had good signal strength, whereas Ofcom put the figure at 90%, the council said. The BBC checked data for its office in rated coverage as "likely" for all four companies, while Streetwave described the signal strength from two providers as "poor".Dorset Council's project leader Gary Littledyke said Ofcom used data from computer simulations, whereas Streetwave took a snapshot of actual signal strength on the day of said: "It's not foolproof, but it gives an indication of likelihood. We will continue to gather data during the pilot."If you go on to the coverage checker of any provider's website, it will largely tell you everything is fine, whereas we know that's not the case in Dorset."Dorset councillor Richard Biggs, in charge of economic growth, said: "We have known for many years that the mobile coverage data provided by Ofcom does not give an accurate picture for Dorset."This checker... will help us lobby the government and suppliers for better coverage in areas we know are currently struggling."Ofcom said: "We're working to overhaul our mobile coverage checker, which we will relaunch very soon with new and improved data to better reflect what people can expect."The Streetwave postcode coverage checker can be accessed via this link, while Ofcom's tool is available here. You can follow BBC Dorset on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Teesside bin lorries to help tackle 'rubbish' mobile signal
Teesside bin lorries to help tackle 'rubbish' mobile signal

BBC News

time14 hours ago

  • Automotive
  • BBC News

Teesside bin lorries to help tackle 'rubbish' mobile signal

Bin wagons are being used to help tackle "rubbish" phone coverage in digital vehicles have been fitted with smartphones to monitor signal strength as they travel on their rounds in Darlington, Hartlepool, Middlesbrough, Redcar and Stockton.A partnership between five councils in the area, the Tees Valley Combined Authority and digital mapping firm Inakalum, data will be collected from each of the four major mobile results will be used in the development of a mobile coverage checker aimed at helping people understand signal quality in their area as well as identify areas where changes are needed. Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen said it was time to "go further to tackle digital blackspots that hold back people and businesses"."Whether you're on a farm in East Cleveland or running a business in Darlington, decent signal shouldn't be a luxury - it should be the bare minimum."If we want to build on our potential as a digital powerhouse, we need to make sure everyone is properly connected."Steve Harker, leader of Darlington Council and cabinet member for transport and infrastructure, added: "We're using our bin wagons to sort more than just our rubbish - we're sorting rubbish signal out, too."This will give us hard evidence of problems people who have poor signal know only too well and arm us to go to providers and government to get it sorted."Lisa Evans, leader of Stockton Council, warned "many people still struggle with poor signal and slow data speeds".The project has been funded with the help of £32,490 from the government's UK Shared Prosperity Fund and follows similar programmes elsewhere in the country, including Liverpool. Follow BBC Tees on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

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