The rapid rise of mobile signal boosters in Europe

David Banks
Authored by David Banks
Posted Thursday, August 1, 2019 - 8:12am

The European Continent is way far from being an easy territory to cover for mobile phone companies. Mountains, seas, a variety of residential areas to cover scattered across the whole area: the difficulties are manifold. This is the main reason why the mobile phone signal, in certain zones, could result weak and intermittent, undermining the quality of service. Phone companies suffer from the negative spill-over effects of this kind of inconveniences, apparently seeming helpless in front of unavoidable circumstances, far beyond their control. Therefore, it was up to external parties to come out with a possible solution.

Those third parties that allow phone companies to enhance and speed up their signal power are mobile signal boosters, a relatively new family of devices designed to improve connectivity in all those urban or suburban territories where making a simple phone call could be just as hard as in a desert area.

Basically, devices like these ones – like the series produced and released in the UK by O2 Mobile Signal Booster – consist of several parts. The essential ones are a mobile repeater, an indoor antenna with cable, an outdoor antenna and obviously a power supply. The most contemporary products are designed to extremely minimize the overall dimensions, so that every indoor or outdoor environment could easily incorporate the device within its space. By the way, all the most important companies in this specific business provide for an extensive customizing service, based on the environment’s size, its structure, the number of rooms and so on.

Mobile signal boosters are gaining more and more customers and users, mostly in the rural areas. UK’s countryside inhabitants, for instance, are proving to be extremely receptive and interested in investing in this kind of device. And we shouldn’t be surprised about that: after all, this simple technology innovation helps solving a remarkable number of connectivity issues for a large part of European population; and on top of everything else, it does it at a very low cost. Thus it came as no surprise when the global market showed a huge interest in investing on this specific branch of industry: it could be the next big thing in the digital market, hopefully for many years to come.

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