Milan, Italy
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Milan (Italian: Milano) is a large city in the northwest of Italy, a European country. It is also the capital of the Metropolitan City of Milan and the capital of the Lombardy region. It is located on the most densely populated and most developed Lombardy plain in Italy. It is an important traffic point in southern Europe, with a long history, famous for fashion, sightseeing, and architectural landscape. The municipal area of Milan currently has 1.38 million residents, and its metropolitan area reaches 8.22 million people, making it the largest metropolitan area in Italy, the second largest in the European Union, and the third largest in Europe.
Vodafone IT - Vodafone Italia (formerly Vodafone Omnitel N.V.) is an Italian telephone company with 26,000,000 mobile phone customers and a market share of approximately 30% in Italy. Vodafone has 2,300,000 fixed-line customers in Italy and a market share of 12%. Vodafone fiber optic coverage covers most cities in Italy, making it possible to surf the Internet at home at speeds of up to 1 Gb/s or 100 Mb/s using all the power of the Vodafone network.
Wind Tre – Wind Tre S.p.A. is an Italian telecommunications company based in Rome. Wind Tre has 27.1 million mobile customers with a market share of 30.8% (ahead of TIM, Vodafone and Iliad) and 2.7 million fixed-line customers with a market share of 13.2% (making it the second largest fixed-line operator after at TIM). The company provides mobile, landline, internet and cable TV via IPTV. As of the end of 2019, the company had 26.6 million customers.
1. Milan Cathedral (Italian: Duomo di Milano) is located in the Duomo Square in the center of Milan, Lombardy, Italy. It is the cathedral of the Catholic Archdiocese of Milan. It took six centuries from its inception to its completion. It is the largest church in Italy (the Vatican does not belong to Italy, and St. Peter's Basilica is the largest), the third largest in Europe and the fourth in the world. Construction on the Duomo of Milan began in 1386 and was officially completed in 1965 when the last bronze doors were in place. It took more than five centuries to complete, so its architectural styles include Gothic, Neoclassical and Neo-Gothic. The architectural style of the church using white marble is very unique. The upper part is a Gothic steeple. According to statistics, there are 138 towers in total. The lower part is a typical Baroque style, full of sculptures from top to bottom, extremely complicated and exquisite, and is a representative building of the Renaissance. Milan Cathedral is one of the most prosperous areas in Milan, where field testers conduct various 5G calls and throughput tests.
2. Milan Chinatown is located in the eighth district of Milan, Italy, and is also a traditional business district. The Chinatown is the largest and oldest Chinese neighborhood in Italy, with approximately 21,000 residents in 2011. Today, Chinatown is full of barbershops, fashion boutiques, silk and leather shops, libraries, tourist agencies and medical centers. Most of the Chinese takeaways and restaurants in the area specialize in Zhejiang cuisine. Some Italian Chinese companies also set up their headquarters nearby, including the editorial office of the newspaper "European China Daily". In Milan Chinatown, the signal coverage is okay, and some shops can conduct srvcc tests.