Proposed Ga. Bill Would Help Expand Rural Broadband, Lawmakers Say

“AT&T is testing out a new high-speed Internet device in an undisclosed location in rural Georgia and it would be one pilot that could benefit from House Bill 533.”

Courtesy of AT&T

AT&T is testing out a new high-speed Internet device in an undisclosed location in rural Georgia.

It’s called Project AirGig and rural Georgia is the first test site in the U.S.

It’s a wireless alternative to fiber cables and transmits high speeds – in the gigabit range – from small plastic antennas placed on top of Georgia Power’s utility poles. It uses extremely high-frequency waves called millimeter waves and doesn’t need to send signals through the power lines themselves.