T-Mobile To Launch Its Own Branded Budget Smartphone (cnet.com)
In a throwback to a time when carriers differentiated themselves by branding and selling exclusive phones, T-Mobile announced Wednesday that it's launching its very own budget Android smartphone called the Revvl. CNET reports: The Revvl, which runs on Android Nougat, offers pretty basic specs: a 5.5 inch HD display, 2GB of RAM, 32GB of storage, a 13-megapixel rear-facing camera a 5-megapixel front-facing camera. But it also throws in a fingerprint sensor and will cost T-Mobile customers just $5 a month with no down payment through the company's Jump! upgrade program. It goes on sale Thursday. In a blog post, T-Mobile COO Mike Sievert said the company is catering to those who want the latest smartphone technology but can't afford to pay for high-end devices.
Never buy a phone a Carriers name printed on it, or has an OS customized with their bloatware and branding.
SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
We salute your efforts at supporting the disconnected among us, and the anti-socials as well. With our imaginary friends. Step back, hombre.
Carriers have been doing this for years, at least where I live, (not US).
They seem to be low-end Android, locked to the one network, but cheap as chips, and available to buy outright.
I am guessing there is quite a big market for such devices, here's an example.
A carrier's handset is optimized for their network.
Yeah handsets are optimized for mobile use, just like cars are optimized for road use.
Carriers know everything about their own handsets
yeah that's a laugh! why can't they supply updates? because THEY DON'T HAVE THE CODE
This is potentially a good/great phone to recommend to price-sensitive users but will depend on (1) can be unlocked from T-Mobile, and (2) based on such thin margins what's the firmware update situation going to be?
It might be news in the US, but Vodafone in the UK have done this for years. They have a "Smart" range - here's one of the cheapest at 49 pounds PAYG (and a 10 pounds top-up I believe).
This phone is not cheaper nor better than existing similar options. For $5 / month / 24 months, the cost is $120, and for $120, you could buy a Moto E, and get basically the same 2 GB + crap camera = fingerprint reader spec phone. $120 for a budget phone is pretty standard, and tmobile already has a ton of phones with their logo printed right on it. I don't see why this particular deal is newsworthy.
Obsolete OS...just walk around with a "kick me" sign on your back... Now, if T-mobile wants to get serious and actually bring to market a phone with specs like this that is updated for 4 years, well, then there is some news.