Title: "Unlock the Power of 116m GSM Data: The Best Mobile Experience for You"
1. Executive Summary
For users requiring ~100–150GB/month, the best plans balance cost, speed, and network coverage. No major carrier offers exactly 116GB, but several offer 100GB or 150GB tiers. Best overall depends on region:
- Capacity planning, identifying overloaded cells, handover tuning.
Typical fields and data structure
- Timestamp (UTC)
- Cell ID / eNodeB / BTS identifier
- Location (lat/long) of measurement or centroid of cell
- Channel/RAN parameters: ARFCN, PCI, TAC, LAC, MCC/MNC
- Signal metrics: RSSI, RSRP, RSRQ, SINR, timing advance
- Throughput / data session stats: RLC/MAC counters, byte counts, UL/DL throughput
- Event indicators: attach/detach, handover start/complete, drop reason codes
- Subscriber-agnostic aggregates or anonymized IDs (for privacy)
- Measurement source: drive test, network probe, UE crowdsourcing
What is large-scale GSM data?
- GSM basics: 2G cellular standard for voice and basic data (GPRS/EDGE). Networks collect measurements from base stations (BTS), user equipment (UE), and drive-test tools.
- Large-scale GSM datasets include call detail records (CDRs), signaling logs, cell coverage measurements, neighbor lists, timing advance, received signal strength indicator (RSSI/RSCP), location-area updates, and throughput metrics.
- Scale: “116m” here implies very large spatial/measurement scope — hundreds of thousands to millions of samples.
If this refers to specific data points from 2025–2026, the "116m" likely represents a subscriber count (116 million) within a Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) network. Alternatively, in a manufacturing context, it may refer to a specific heavy-duty paper weight. 1. Telecommunications Context: 116 Million GSM Data Users
3. The Hotspot Specialist: AT&T Prepaid "Turbo" Hotspot Plan
If your "116m GSM data" is for a router or a mobile hotspot (like a Nighthawk M6), ignore phone plans.