Domain: t-mobile.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to t-mobile.com.
Comments · 463
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Re:Tmobile wifi calling solves this problem
I have a sidekick 4g. It is an ancient froyo device.
It does wifi calling just fine.
As for being more on topic concerning plans, monthy pay as you go is the beast deal from T-mo, especially if you own the handset.
I use the 50$/mo plan. At the "2G throttled speed", internet speed test says the download speed is about 150kbps, and upload is 215kbs. 100mb/mo at 4g is a tease, but it goes bitchin fast for those few minutes every month. Upping to the 60 or 70/mo, with the higher cap wouldn't be so bad, but I don't really need the speed to just surf and pull the occasional file from the net while on the go.
My use case has me using the wifi calling while at home, and normal cell coverage while in town.
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tmobile never stopped unlimited service.
just needed to do it outside a contract. i use the $30 one myself. http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/prepaid-plans
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Re:It probably won't make a difference, but...
If that fails, you could try one of the complaint departments AT&T actually listens to.
http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/index.html
http://www.t-mobile.com/
http://shop.sprint.com/mysprint/shop/phone_wall.jsp?filterString=apple&isDeeplinked=true&INTNAV=ATG:HE:iPhones -
Try Prepaid
There is a very useful table of prepaid plans over at Howard Forums. Since you have a GSM phone, you'll want one of the carriers that uses AT&T's or T-Mobile's network.
I'm pretty happy with T-Mobile's $30 monthly prepaid plan, since I rarely need many talk minutes and I'm willing to live with 2G data speeds until they refarm their 1900 MHz spectrum to support 3G later this year.
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Re:SimpleMobile
With unlimited web, 30 bucks gets you unlimited talk, text, and web too.
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T-Mobile
I second that. T-Mobile is the only major carrier in US to allow buying a phone elsewhere. It's coverage does not match that of Verizon but I was fine everywhere in NE save some wild mountain ranges.It also offers best bang for the buck compared to AT&T and Verizon.
I believe this is the correct link: http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/monthly-4g-plans -
T-Mobile Monthly4G Prepaid
Your Google Nexus One is T-Mobile compatible for high speed data access, so check out the Monthly4G offering.
They offer unlimited talk, text, and web for $50/mo, and a plan with 100 minutes of talk, unlimited text and web for $30/mo with additional minutes for $0.10/min.
Also, if you are willing to spend a little money to get a more advanced phone later on, I'd recommend picking up either a Samsung Galaxy Nexus ($349) or the Samsung Galaxy S Blaze 4G ($300). Both options do not require a contract and are compatible with T-Mobile's HSPA+ network.
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T-Mobile Monthly4G Prepaid
Your Google Nexus One is T-Mobile compatible for high speed data access, so check out the Monthly4G offering.
They offer unlimited talk, text, and web for $50/mo, and a plan with 100 minutes of talk, unlimited text and web for $30/mo with additional minutes for $0.10/min.
Also, if you are willing to spend a little money to get a more advanced phone later on, I'd recommend picking up either a Samsung Galaxy Nexus ($349) or the Samsung Galaxy S Blaze 4G ($300). Both options do not require a contract and are compatible with T-Mobile's HSPA+ network.
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Downgrade.
They don't advertise it via the Web, but T Mobile appears to be the vendor of choice among people who want minimum commitment mobile phones. Devices start at $20, unlimited SMS is $15 month to month.
http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/monthly-4g-plans
We downgraded from smartphones to unlimited text + pay to talk, and haven't looked back. I already carry a 4G wifi and a laptop at all times, so the ~$100 a month for a fragile device (hardware and software) with 4 hours of battery life and probable spyware just seemed insane in hindsight.
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Re:Victims of their own greed
but sometimes "just build more towers" is much, much easier said than done.
Kinda makes you wonder why, from the big 4, only T-Mobile (at least in the US) has embraced WiFi Calling via UMA. After all, the costs to the telcos is MUCH cheaper than new towers.
Oh....wait. I think I understand: There's no profit in it.
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Re:No room to differentiate?
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Re:Verizon only
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Re:FB and Google are NOT in the same situation.
Only because nobody makes a good multi-core phone with a decent physical keyboard. Somebody, please, put a fast dual-core processor and 1 GB of RAM into a phone with this kind of keyboard please!
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Re:Congratulations, Verizon
I was going to reply and tell you that you're mistaken. But, I decided to google it first, just to make sure before I made an ass of myself. Turns out, you're right.
I was going to reply and say "you must be new here." But, I decided to look at your UID first, just to make sure before I made an ass out of you. Turns out, you're not.
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Re:Congratulations, Verizon
I was going to reply and tell you that you're mistaken. But, I decided to google it first, just to make sure before I made an ass of myself. Turns out, you're right. I was not aware.
I tether often, and I don't notice this on pages loaded on the tethered PC. It must be a forced proxy they have set up in the stock browser? -
Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile has an equivalent here
In Germany it's 3GB on a no-contract no-commitment prepaid SIM for €20/mo. (if you go over, you still get service, but 56k-ish speeds) This is on the Deutsche Telekom network, probably the best in that market.
Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile here in the US has a no-contract plan through their website that's fairly similar: it's US$30/month for 100 min talk + 5GB data at 4G speed, then 56k-ish speeds after that. All of the other plans I've been able to find cost 2-3 times as much to allow smartphones, and most only include 50-200 megs of data usage with high per-kilobyte charges beyond it, and many now include wifi & Google Talk use in counting towards included data/minutes.
I sure hope T-Mobile decides to stick with the US market in the long run, needless to say -- we need them.
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Re:20 years later...
Yes unlike this chart, it is very hard to figure out the cost of your plan
.. I know charts can be very confusinghttp://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/store/controller?item=prepayItem&action=viewPrepayOverview
Or this one from ATT
Or this one from Team Mobile
http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/pay-as-you-go-plansYou do not have to pay
.20 per txt and it is very easy to figure out the plan that works best for you (well I guess since many in the USA by the time they get to HS can not balance a checkbook so basic addition and subtraction is elusive it really is not so easy) ... I can not find an actual study that has the number of people that take the very basic most expensive prepay option as you claim (ie 20c per txt or 25c/min) since an average phone call takes more then 3 min based at least on this article not just because I felt it was true (ie $1 on the perpay)
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_average_length_of_a_phone_callWith prepay you have to use up the funds you put on your phone it almost doesn't make sense to do the 100% pay as you go option unless you know that on any given day you will never make a call more then 3 min long and the phone is really just for emergencies (not 911 emergencies) and even then if you get the 100/year plan (that is less then 10/month for the not so math inclined) and the $2/day option the most you will pay on any given day you use the phone is $2 the least is 0 and each txt is
.02 so you are better off sending a txt message then making a call if you can. Yes you do need some basic math and to pay attention to what you do.F you dude. Why does the entire world send th students to our universities.? Because they are the best in the world. Why os ot tat America consistantly produces more Noble prize winners then the entire world combined. F- you dude.
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Re:20 years later...
Yes unlike this chart, it is very hard to figure out the cost of your plan
.. I know charts can be very confusing http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/store/controller?item=prepayItem&action=viewPrepayOverview Or this one from ATT http://www.wireless.att.com/cell-phone-service/cell-phone-plans/pyg-cell-phone-plans.jsp?wtSlotClick=1-007FTV-0-2&_requestid=186952 Or this one from Team Mobile http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/pay-as-you-go-plans You do not have to pay .20 per txt and it is very easy to figure out the plan that works best for you (well I guess since many in the USA by the time they get to HS can not balance a checkbook so basic addition and subtraction is elusive it really is not so easy) ... I can not find an actual study that has the number of people that take the very basic most expensive prepay option as you claim (ie 20c per txt or 25c/min) since an average phone call takes more then 3 min based at least on this article not just because I felt it was true (ie $1 on the perpay) http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_average_length_of_a_phone_call With prepay you have to use up the funds you put on your phone it almost doesn't make sense to do the 100% pay as you go option unless you know that on any given day you will never make a call more then 3 min long and the phone is really just for emergencies (not 911 emergencies) and even then if you get the 100/year plan (that is less then 10/month for the not so math inclined) and the $2/day option the most you will pay on any given day you use the phone is $2 the least is 0 and each txt is .02 so you are better off sending a txt message then making a call if you can. Yes you do need some basic math and to pay attention to what you do. -
Re:Euwww!
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Thank you for posting this.
As a T-Mobile customer with 2 accounts (one of them pre-paid) I had no idea it was being censored. I despise ANY ISP censoring my web experience that I pay good money for. Even if I don't access these sites, I'm a grown man and I prefer to make my own decisions.
Unfortunately, the article seems to be lacking the obvious question: how to turn it off.
A quick Google search yielded some results:
http://support.t-mobile.com/docs/DOC-2144#How_do_I_enable_or_disable_Web_Guard_at_My_TMobile
Done.
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Re:The Answer
Yes. it works fine and in fact they have a number of plans specifically intended for whatever you might want, whether it's voice/text or if you want data too. I don't think they really care what kind of phone you have, you just go into one of their shops and buy a SIM kit for like $10, choose your plan and put in whatever amount you want. Periodically you can either top up by going to a participating cell phone shop or just add more time directly on the phone with a credit card.
I use T-Mobile and they offer pay as you go, pay by the day and Monthly4G.
I use pay by the day, which costs me nothing unless I place or answer a call, at which point it charges me $2 but then all calls, texts and data cost nothing extra for the next 24 hours. There is a cheaper $1 pay by the day plan that charges $0.10/minute for non T-Mobile to T-Mobile calls between 7AM-7PM, unlimited texts and has no data service. There is also a more expensive $3 plan that is the same as the $2 plan, except the data speed is faster.
The pay as you go plan looks like a standard add time for a set amount of minutes. I'm not sure what texting and data is like on that since I don't use this plan.
The Monthly4G looks like a standard contract plan where you pay anywhere from $15 to $70/month for various services, except it doesn't require a contract.
T-Mobile Pay By The Day plans
T-Mobile Pay As You Go plans
T-Mobile Monthly4G plansI imagine AT&T offers similar plans, but I am not sure of the details.
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Re:The Answer
Yes. it works fine and in fact they have a number of plans specifically intended for whatever you might want, whether it's voice/text or if you want data too. I don't think they really care what kind of phone you have, you just go into one of their shops and buy a SIM kit for like $10, choose your plan and put in whatever amount you want. Periodically you can either top up by going to a participating cell phone shop or just add more time directly on the phone with a credit card.
I use T-Mobile and they offer pay as you go, pay by the day and Monthly4G.
I use pay by the day, which costs me nothing unless I place or answer a call, at which point it charges me $2 but then all calls, texts and data cost nothing extra for the next 24 hours. There is a cheaper $1 pay by the day plan that charges $0.10/minute for non T-Mobile to T-Mobile calls between 7AM-7PM, unlimited texts and has no data service. There is also a more expensive $3 plan that is the same as the $2 plan, except the data speed is faster.
The pay as you go plan looks like a standard add time for a set amount of minutes. I'm not sure what texting and data is like on that since I don't use this plan.
The Monthly4G looks like a standard contract plan where you pay anywhere from $15 to $70/month for various services, except it doesn't require a contract.
T-Mobile Pay By The Day plans
T-Mobile Pay As You Go plans
T-Mobile Monthly4G plansI imagine AT&T offers similar plans, but I am not sure of the details.
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Re:The Answer
Yes. it works fine and in fact they have a number of plans specifically intended for whatever you might want, whether it's voice/text or if you want data too. I don't think they really care what kind of phone you have, you just go into one of their shops and buy a SIM kit for like $10, choose your plan and put in whatever amount you want. Periodically you can either top up by going to a participating cell phone shop or just add more time directly on the phone with a credit card.
I use T-Mobile and they offer pay as you go, pay by the day and Monthly4G.
I use pay by the day, which costs me nothing unless I place or answer a call, at which point it charges me $2 but then all calls, texts and data cost nothing extra for the next 24 hours. There is a cheaper $1 pay by the day plan that charges $0.10/minute for non T-Mobile to T-Mobile calls between 7AM-7PM, unlimited texts and has no data service. There is also a more expensive $3 plan that is the same as the $2 plan, except the data speed is faster.
The pay as you go plan looks like a standard add time for a set amount of minutes. I'm not sure what texting and data is like on that since I don't use this plan.
The Monthly4G looks like a standard contract plan where you pay anywhere from $15 to $70/month for various services, except it doesn't require a contract.
T-Mobile Pay By The Day plans
T-Mobile Pay As You Go plans
T-Mobile Monthly4G plansI imagine AT&T offers similar plans, but I am not sure of the details.
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Free wifi
Remember, we have free wifi at almost every coffee shop and McDonalds. Here's a pre-paid 4g hotspot: http://www.amazon.com/T-Mobile-1661-4G-Hotspot/dp/B005MKERVQ/ref=dp_return_1?ie=UTF8&n=2335752011&s=wireless http://www.t-mobile.com/coverage/pcc.aspx
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Coverage Maps
All of the major carriers have coverage maps that are more or less accurate.
Verizon: www.verizonwireless.com/wireless-coverage-area-map.shtml
AT&T: http://www.wireless.att.com/coverageviewer/#?type=data
Sprint: http://coverage.sprint.com/IMPACT.jsp?
T-Mobile: http://www.t-mobile.com/coverage/pcc.aspx
Other Sites that may be useful:
http://www.cellreception.com/coverage/
http://reviews.cnet.com/cell-phone-coverage-map/Behold, the power of Google.
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Re:I bet T-Mobile is following Free Mobile in Fran
T-Mo is doing that. Their $30/mo prepaid plan is pretty sweet. 100 minutes, unlimited text, unlimited data. The only catch is the first 5GB is at 4G speeds. After that, you may be throttled to EDGE. So there's only 100 minutes... who needs minutes with an android + free calls with Google voice?
As far as I'm concerned, it's the best thing to happen to the price of internet access since AOL's $19.95/mo flat rate.
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Re:Except what will really happen
Buy a prepaid phone. The up front cost of the phone is more expensive, but the service plans are cheaper.
Except T-mobile dropped pay-as-you-go data, so if you want talk and data, you're stuck with a monthly plan.
Really?
Seems to look like pay by the day data plans still exist.
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Re:There needs to be a way to avoid the subsidy.
T-Mobile does this:
http://www.t-mobile.com/shop/Packages/ValuePackages.aspx
For $50/month you can get 500 voice minutes, unlimited text, and 2GB of data.
In comparison to AT&T, they offer a subsidized plan for $90/month and that includes 450 voice minutes, unlimited text, and 3GB of data. Let's say with T-Mobile you get the above plan for $50/month and a phone for $550. At the end of 24 months you will have paid $1,750. If you got AT&T and paid $200 for a subsidized phone, you will have paid $2,360 at the end of 24 months. This is pretty much the primary reason why I am a T-Mobile customer.
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T-Mobile
It's really the only way to go. $30/month for unlimited calls and SMS or 100 minutes talk and 5 GB data.
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Definitely T-mobile
In addition to their Pay-As-You-Go plans, T-mobile also has what they call their Monthy 4G Prepaid plans...you have to provide your own phone (or purchase one of their no-contract phones), but for $30 you get 1500 minutes a month for talk/text, and 30 mb for data, which is enough for basic email and occasional web browsing (if your phone supports those things; my Samsung t259 flip phone does, which can definitely come in handy at times).
And no, I don't work for T-mobile. -
Definitely T-mobile
In addition to their Pay-As-You-Go plans, T-mobile also has what they call their Monthy 4G Prepaid plans...you have to provide your own phone (or purchase one of their no-contract phones), but for $30 you get 1500 minutes a month for talk/text, and 30 mb for data, which is enough for basic email and occasional web browsing (if your phone supports those things; my Samsung t259 flip phone does, which can definitely come in handy at times).
And no, I don't work for T-mobile. -
Definitely T-mobile
In addition to their Pay-As-You-Go plans, T-mobile also has what they call their Monthy 4G Prepaid plans...you have to provide your own phone (or purchase one of their no-contract phones), but for $30 you get 1500 minutes a month for talk/text, and 30 mb for data, which is enough for basic email and occasional web browsing (if your phone supports those things; my Samsung t259 flip phone does, which can definitely come in handy at times).
And no, I don't work for T-mobile. -
Re:iPod touch
or iPod Touch with Peel520 -- http://www.peel520.net/
Then add a TMobile SIM on the Pay As You Go plan -- http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/pay-as-you-go-plans. If you get $100 worth of minutes, they'll roll over after a year when you buy any amount to renew.
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tmobile prepaid
Best deals I've seen are tmobile prepaid. For example they have an unlimited data/text (up to 5gb at 4g speed) and 100 minutes for $30 a month.
Then I would actually buy an android smartphone used or new (tmobile will sell you a sim card for $2 or $6), and install google voice. Now you can have free calling within the US.
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Re:Can't make it slow if you can't get it
Well, T-Mobile's most expensive unlimited everything (and apparently not throttled), is $70. There is also an Unlimited-but-throttled plan (5gb @ 4g, the remaining at 3G), with unlimited text and 100 minutes of talk: that's only $30.
I live in a medium sized town (about 80,000 people, next largest town is 25 miles away and smaller), and I have decent 4g coverage. No problem streaming videos on Netflix.
Plan chart:
http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/monthly-4g-plans -
Re:But will they abandon it
Are you talking about the same Bing that came pre-installed as the default (un-changeable without rooting) search option on my wife's Verizon Samsung Fascinate? The same Bing that when I type something into the browser to search expecting google results like my unbranded Samsung Galaxy S does (nearly the same damn phone), I instead get Bing results that have nearly NO RELEVANCE to what I was searching for?
And that's the gods honest truth.
An example...
"teamhacksung ics build 14 galaxy s"
This update for build 14 was just done yesterday.First result on Google: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=21498197#post21498197
Exactly what I wantedFirst result on Bing: http://galaxy-s.t-mobile.com/samsung-galaxy-s2?cm_mmc_o=Vzbp+mwzygt*VAygtzlw*VyBpAgf+mA55Byf*VyBpAgf+mA55Byf
Second result: http://www.hdtechvideo.com/forum/index.php?threads/rom-teamhacksungs-ics-port-build-14.48/
Third result: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=20794402
Right forum and thread, but takes me to page 716, where as google takes me to the FIRST page where the info, downloads, etc are.And this is just one example.. I've had TONS that were way worse with Bing not returning even CLOSE to what I was looking for, and google returning exactly what I wanted in the first few results (typically the first few are so close in terms to each other any one of them would work)
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Re:Shocked.
TMobile has a plan that seems perfect for the heavy data user/occasional caller.
Its prepaid Monthly4G plan.Choose "Unlimited Web & Text with 100 Minutes Talk" for $30/mo gets you 5GB of 4G data per month and then you'll be throttled down to EDGE most likely.
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Re:Another way to save money
T-Mobile will give you very close to that price on an Android phone with unlimited talk, text, long distance, and data. You will likely get better coverage to boot.
http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/prepaid-plans -
Re:He never talks on the phone, either
$4/month / $0.10/minute = 40 minutes / month
boost does 20c per minute http://www.boostmobile.com/shop/plans/pay-as-you-go/ for new customers
t-mobile does 10c per minute if you buy 1k minutes(1 year) at once time http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/pay-as-you-go-plans -
Re:And there was much rejoicing !!
End the coverage debate: http://www.t-mobile.com/coverage/pcc.aspx
There is a lot of area that isn't covered, but most sections of interstate are covered.
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Re:Do carrier make money off phone sales?
USA. VZW, AT&T, Sprint. I even walked into an AT&T store and mentioned the discount on the monthly bill that T-Mobile offers for buying the phone up front (then called "Even More Plus", now apparently called Value Plans) to an AT&T sales rep, and he sounded surprised that any carrier would even offer a thing like that. But I'm wary of signing up with T-Mobile because AT&T still has a chance to buy T-Mobile's network.
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Re:Municipal broadband is on its way, then
It's not just you.
Look at your $60-120 cable bill and tell me there isn't something else that would make you happy with that money. At the high end, that's a family mobile plan with data for a family of four.
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Re:Welcome to dumb pipes.
T-Mobile: http://www.t-mobile.com/shop/plans/mobile-broadband-plans.aspx
2GB for $40/month (2G speeds after specified data limit)
5GB for $50/month (2G speeds after specified data limit)
10GB for $80/month (2G speeds after specified data limit)I'm on their $50/month unlimited plan (talk, text, data). Sure, it throttles down to 2G speeds after 2GB of data. So? Planning on buying the Galaxy Nexus when it launches, and I can live with those restrictions for $50/month.
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Re:How about a radical suggesion?
First: I personally don't own any Apple products, thus your assertion is wrong.
In fact, here is a comment explaining why I HATE these types of phones, and here is a comment describing the phone that I do own. Yes, it's a simple old Nokia 6303c, with buttons, with camera taken out and with all phone unrelated functions turned off.
Thus I have just proven another AC to be wrong on his assertions. What an accomplishment.
Secondly: the wealth of new ideas that Jobs has generated are more than just the iPhones and iPads and iPods, all that.
He also produced the first computer animated movies, like Toy Story. He basically ensured that Pixar lives.
While you may be in a camp of hating Apple products, you cannot deny, that other products have borrowed extensively from Apple hardware and software solutions, as so many current gadgets look like they might have been created by Apple, and it's not a coincidence. So yes, by saying what you are saying, you are proving to be an idiot, which was my point.
Of-course I was not talking about that kind of idiot, I was more talking about this kind of idiot, but you are almost out there with them.
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Re:T-Mo crippled itself.
They are still advertising monthly contract-free plans online. They are on the prepaid section of their website, but don't seem any different than the contract-free plan that my girlfriend is currently on.
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Not true.
I put my girlfriend in a pre-paid T-Moblie plan about a month ago, long after the announcement.
Here's proof: http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/
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Re:That's also not the default home screen
I did the lighting for a number of the TV commercials for the Galaxy S. The apple screen shots are pretty close to the 'official' home screen layout approved by T-Mobile and Samsung.
e.g. http://galaxy-s.t-mobile.com/
I think the lawsuit is stupid but Apple didn't really game the homescreen in any way. That's an approved Samsung screenshot.
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Do your homework
For nationwide GSM in the USA you've AT&T & T-Mobile USA. Check both of their online coverage maps; while they've comparable coverage maps these days they're not the same and one or the other might be a better fit.
As you're only going to need the service for a short time prepaid is the obvious suggestion. Therefore when you do your coverage checks be sure to check prepaid coverage specifically; it often has slightly different coverage, different roaming agreements with other carriers, etc.
AT&T is the native home of your handset so they're the obvious choice. They offer 3G on a frequency your handset supports, T-Mobile USA doesn't so you'll only ever get EDGE data on your handset. On the other hand T-Mobile USA's $50 Monthly4G offers unlimited domestic voice, texting, and data (speed-limited after the first 100MB, which you will barely notice being on EDGE anyhow.)
FWIW I regularly deal with folks visiting the USA happily using T-Mobile prepaid ("Monthly4G") on their iPhones. While it isn't 3G speed for their device it is reliable and economical. Apparently the only change they need to make (aside from having an unlocked handset) is to the SMS/MMS settings, and that is detailed in T-Mobile's online support at forums.t-mobile.com.
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Re:T-mobile pay as you go
Note that T-mobile has two different types of prepaid plans. With "pay as you go" plans, you put in an amount of money that can be used for voice, SMS, or data. With "pay by the month" plans, you pay a fixed amount per month, but with no multi-month commitment. Either one might end up best for you, depending on how much you plan to use the phone.
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Re:Does not seem legal...
So, why are T-Mobile not in violation of these provisions? Are there any legal types who can explain how this can be legitimate?
Good luck fighting that one in binding arbitration. They have your signature on their terms and conditions:, which they can change any time they feel like it, really meaning you already agreed to anything they want.
- To provide a good experience for the majority of our customers and minimize capacity issues and degradation in network performance, we may take measures including temporarily reducing data throughput for a subset of customers who use a disproportionate amount of bandwidth. If your total usage exceeds 5GB (amount is subject to change without notice; please check T-Mobile’s T&Cs on www.T-Mobile.com for updates) during a billing cycle, we may reduce your data speed for the remainder of that billing cycle.
and
You agree not to misuse the Service or Device, including but not limited to:
... (g) using the Service in connection with server devices or host computer applications, including continuous Web camera posts or broadcasts, automatic data feeds, automated machine-to-machine connections or peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing applications that are broadcast to multiple servers or recipients, “bots” or similar routines that could disrupt net user groups or email use by others or other applications that denigrate network capacity or functionality; .... (i) running software or other devices that maintain continuously active Internet connections when a computer’s connection would otherwise be idle, or “keep alive” functions (e.g. using a Data Plan for Web broadcasting, operating servers, telemetry devices and/or supervisory control and data acquisition devices); or (j) assisting or facilitating anyone else in any of the above activities. Unless authorized by T-Mobile, you agree that you won't install, deploy, or use any regeneration equipment or similar mechanism (for example, a repeater) to originate, amplify, enhance, retransmit or regenerate a transmitted RF signal. You agree that a violation of this section harms T-Mobile, which cannot be fully redressed by money damages, and that T-Mobile shall be entitled to immediate injunctive relief in addition to all other remedies available.Other notable one-sided crap in the contract:
- WE EACH AGREE THAT ANY DISPUTE RESOLUTION PROCEEDINGS,
... WILL BE CONDUCTED ONLY ON AN INDIVIDUAL BASIS AND NOT IN A CLASS OR REPRESENTATIVE ACTION OR AS A MEMBER IN A CLASS, CONSOLIDATED OR REPRESENTATIVE ACTION.-
...WE EACH WAIVE ANY RIGHT TO A JURY TRIAL- WE CAN CHANGE ANY TERMS IN THE AGREEMENT AT ANY TIME.