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What Happened to Nextel?

Nextel Communications shut down on June 30, 2013. Sprint acquired Nextel in 2005, but the two networks were incompatible. Unable to evolve to 4G, Sprint decommissioned Nextel’s iDEN network — ending service for more than 20 million users.
Nextel phone

Founded 1987

The Nextel Story

From a New Jersey startup to 20 million subscribers — and how it all ended.
1987 - 1993
From FleetCall to Nextel
Morgan O'Brien, Brian McAuley, Chris Rogers, and Peter Reinheimer founded FleetCall in New Jersey in 1987. In 1993, it became Nextel Communications. The commercial network launched in 1996, built on Motorola's iDEN technology.
1987 - 1993
1996 - 2004
The Chirp That Changed Everything
The signature feature was Direct Connect — push-to-talk at the press of a button. Where traditional calls took four or more seconds to connect, Direct Connect connected in under one. No dialing. No ringing. That chirp became the sound of the job site. Construction crews, logistics teams, and manufacturing operations standardized on Nextel. At its peak the company served over 20 million subscribers across 198 of the top 200 US markets.
1996 - 2004
2005 - 2013
The Sprint Merger and Shutdown
iDEN's data speeds maxed at 14.4 Kbps — slower than 1990s dial-up. When 4G became the standard, iDEN couldn't keep up. Sprint, running two incompatible nationwide networks and bleeding billions, shut the Nextel iDEN network down permanently on June 30, 2013.
2005 - 2013

Then vs. Now

Nextel vs. Walt Smart Radio

Nextel’s instinct was right. Walt carries it forward — on the infrastructure that made iDEN obsolete.

Feature
Nextel (iDEN)
Walt by weavix
Instant Push-to-Talk
Rugged, purpose-built hardware
Class 1 Div 2
No FCC license required
Nationwide coverage
LTE/Wi-Fi/Private
Group communication
GPS Tracking
Basic
Real-time
Photo & video over PTT
AI language translation
50+ Languages
AI transcription & message logging
Dedicated SOS with worker location
Man-down detection
Operational analytics
Offsite supervisor access
Web console + app
Still operational today
Shut down 2013
Nextel vs weavix comparison

Meet Walt by weavix

What Nextel Should Have Become

Nextel’s instinct was right — frontline workers need purpose-built tools, not consumer devices. The technology just wasn’t there yet.

Walt by weavix runs on the same 4G/5G infrastructure that made iDEN obsolete. Same instant PTT. Same rugged hardware. No FCC licenses. But Walt does what Nextel never could: real-time AI translation, photo and video over PTT, AI transcription, dedicated SOS with worker location, GPS tracking, and an operations intelligence layer that turns every conversation into actionable data.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Nextel still around?

No. The network shut down June 30, 2013. The Nextel brand is now owned by T-Mobile Innovations LLC but the network no longer exists. 

Sprint acquired Nextel in 2005 but the two networks were incompatible. iDEN couldn’t evolve to 4G, so Sprint shut it down in 2013 to redeploy the spectrum for LTE.

The chirp was the sound that played when a Direct Connect call connected — the signature of Nextel’s push-to-talk feature, especially familiar to construction and industrial workers.

For industrial frontline teams, purpose-built smart radios like Walt by weavix carry the push-to-talk legacy forward with modern capabilities Nextel never had.

No. Nextel phones ran on the iDEN network, which no longer exists and is incompatible with modern 4G and 5G networks.