According to the city and state authorities, almost all subway stations in New York City are planning to provide mobile phone service one Monday a year ago.
Commuters can send text or make a phone call on the underground platform. Cell coverage is provided to all four major operators: AT & T (T), Verizon (VZ), Sprint (S) and T - Mobile (TMUS).
The only exception is 4 stations undergoing refurbishment including Manhattan's South Ferry Station and 53 Chome Station, Brooklyn Prospect Avenue Station and Bairido Station.
"We are rebuilding subway stations to meet the needs of the next generation," New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo said in a statement Thursday. "This will further develop our vision of deepening our connection with New Yorkers even on the go and reconsidering the most crowded transportation network in the future in the future."
In the last few days of 2016, the Wi-Fi service was officially launched at all subway stations in New York. Ideal for installing evacuation centers on the Internet
A few days after the subway line of Second Avenue in New York opened, the announcement of community service will be announced soon and will record the expansion of the largest subway system in 50 years.
But some drivers are more concerned about the deterioration of the service quality of the aging subway system, which is close to 6 million passengers a day. When Governor Andrew M. Cuomo announced a new mobile phone service on Monday 's Twitter post, there was a crowd image cheering and the frozen drainage at the Manhattan subway station was furious at morning commuting. The series of vow answers remind Cuomo of the delay and suggest that they take precedence over Wi-Fi. Early comments about batteries and Wi-Fi service are mostly favorable. The auditor Scott M. Stringer of the city announced a report this month that the service is functioning well, according to the auditor who visited the test network of the agency. After effectively controlling the power of the Democratic Party, Mr. Kubo speed up the launch to the authorities, but this service arrived in advance.
Now that New Yorkers can now use the free internet service on the subway, waiting for the train to be delayed is a little troublesome. After January 9, all the MTA 281 subway stations in New York are equipped with Wi-Fi and cellular communication range. Using new services is easy. Simply log in to the TransitWireless Wi - Fi network and click Connect. The charge is free, there is no time limit. However, coverage applies only to the station itself. When the train starts, the signal disappears quickly.
December 15, 2006 - MTA New York City Transit has launched Trip Planner, a Web-based service that will guide you how to use the New York subway and bus. Trip Planner also provides service alerts and recommendations. The pilot project became a permanent project on January 1, 2007. April 12, 2007 - New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, MTA Executive Director Elliott Sander and other government officials and executives of the MTA have laid the foundation for the construction of the Second Avenue Subway. The first phase of the project starts from 96th Street to 63rd Street in 2013, has three stations, 200,000 business days.