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Originally Posted by RedElmo
(Post 27089776)
Well as soon as they get rid of the lower pricing I'll switch back to att. I'll go with whichever carrier that offers me the lowest cost that meets my needs. I don't need more than 2GB per line.
Anyone know if you to AT&T with your own equipment, so you still have to do a 2-year contract? |
Originally Posted by Michael Ad
(Post 27089805)
Same for me, except I also need the int'l roaming.
Anyone know if you to AT&T with your own equipment, so you still have to do a 2-year contract? |
If they make the $70 One plan the price of entry into TMob postpaid, they will lose a lot of customers.
It will be hard to walk away from the international data roaming but I'll do it unless they make it high-speed roaming like they did in July and August, but with tethering at 2G speeds, it would be kind of pointless too. |
Originally Posted by wco81
(Post 27090067)
If they make the $70 One plan the price of entry into TMob postpaid, they will lose a lot of customers.
It will be hard to walk away from the international data roaming but I'll do it unless they make it high-speed roaming like they did in July and August, but with tethering at 2G speeds, it would be kind of pointless too. So they shouldn't lose customers, just slow down the rate of accumulating new customers. |
Originally Posted by dtsm
(Post 27088349)
From WSJ: In the new plan, a family with four phones would pay $160 a month. T-Mobile said its most popular family package previously offered four lines for $120 a month with speeds slowed after six gigabytes of use per device. The new plan will be available Sept. 6. Existing T-Mobile customers can keep their current plans.
The "unlimited" Fortunately, I can keep the plan until my son is old enough to need his own line, which is probably 3-4 years off at the earliest -- right now we've got 4 lines because it was literally cheaper to get this than the old plan we had was going to be with 3 -- the 4th line is a spare until my daughter needs one. Odds are there will be yet another batch of new plans long before then. |
I stopped by my local T-Mobile store yesterday and they assured me I could keep my Simple Choice plan ($60 with 3 GB of data). It is more than enough for me. I don't need to give them another 10.00 a month for something I won't use.
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Originally Posted by nkedel
(Post 27090462)
The old family plan is a better deal, at least for some of us.
I'm waiting for the dust to clear before calling to verify we can maintain existing plans - primary concern is the 4th line with unlimited data, which currently costs an additional $30/month. I'm assuming no change although TMO in their formal announcement 'reserved the right' to eliminate grandfathered plans....... The added advantage of this grandfathered plan is the ability to add a 5th, 6th or 7th line for additional $10/month. Again not sure how they'll treat this should the need arise. |
Originally Posted by Xyzzy
(Post 27083773)
:eek:uch! I have 10 or 11 lines on my account. This would more than double my bill. None of the lines go over our current 2gb limit.
I just browsed the site and they said pretty clearly they aren't making anybody switch plans. If you like your plan, you can keep it. :D In fact, for the most part they will continue to sell all their existing plans except for simple choice unlimited. -David |
Originally Posted by LIH Prem
(Post 27092293)
Then don't switch. :)
I just browsed the site and they said pretty clearly they aren't making anybody switch plans. If you like your plan, you can keep it. :D In fact, for the most part they will continue to sell all their existing plans except for simple choice unlimited. |
This situation feels similar to the healthcare debate to me.
Insurers/governments say: One price for all! All you need! No matter how much you need! or T-Mobile says: One price for all the data you can use! Then the low-utilization crowd (healthcare: young and healthy; cell users: low data consumers) say: Why should I pay more so he can get healthcare/data? You could argue that it works in healthcare since it's an insurance program (not trying to provoke a debate - just trying to point on the comparison to cell providers). But can you argue that spreading risks and costs among cell users is the right thing to do? I don't see it in the cell world. Which may be why it appears to be failing already. |
Originally Posted by Michael Ad
(Post 27093120)
This situation feels similar to the healthcare debate to me.
Insurers/governments say: One price for all! All you need! No matter how much you need! or T-Mobile says: One price for all the data you can use! Then the low-utilization crowd (healthcare: young and healthy; cell users: low data consumers) say: Why should I pay more so he can get healthcare/data? You could argue that it works in healthcare since it's an insurance program (not trying to provoke a debate - just trying to point on the comparison to cell providers). But can you argue that spreading risks and costs among cell users is the right thing to do? I don't see it in the cell world. Which may be why it appears to be failing already. |
Check your accounts.
On the T-Mobile app. on my iPhone, it says my data is unlimited. It's suppose to be 3 GB a month with about 8.5 GB data stash. Hope it's just an error in the app. |
Originally Posted by wco81
(Post 27093391)
Check your accounts.
On the T-Mobile app. on my iPhone, it says my data is unlimited. It's suppose to be 3 GB a month with about 8.5 GB data stash. Hope it's just an error in the app. |
Mine shows my 2.5GB, halfway through the cycle, with no phone over 1.1GB used.
Quite content with 2.5GB. |
http://arstechnica.com/information-t...mited-data/#p3
no, they aren't ending all cheaper plans, just unlimited, and I'm guessing only for new signups. But the article lists all the restrictions and caps that I didn't see listed on t-mo's pages. Most have been discussed here, but not all. e.g., after 26GB, you can be throttled at congested towers. -David |
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