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Comcast and AT&T are extending through June 30 a set of initiatives they launched in response to COVID-19, offering wifi hotspots free to everyone (not just their customers) and more flexible ...
Mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) in the United States lease wireless telephone and data service from the four major cellular carriers in the country—AT&T Mobility, Boost Mobile, T-Mobile US, and Verizon—and offer various levels of free and/or paid talk, text and data services to their customers.
AT&T: AT&T Mobility: Operational: GSM 850 / UMTS 850 / UMTS 1900: Originally BellSouth Mobility DCS, then Cingular Wireless, [82] then Aio Wireless, then rebranded as the new GSM Cricket Wireless: 310: 160: T-Mobile: T-Mobile US: Operational: GSM 1900 [82] GSM to shut down Sep 2024 [140] 310: 170: AT&T: AT&T Mobility: Operational: GSM 1900
A SIM lock, simlock, network lock, carrier lock or (master) subsidy lock is a technical restriction built into GSM and CDMA [1] mobile phones by mobile phone manufacturers for use by service providers to restrict the use of these phones to specific countries and/or networks.
Un-carrier is a marketing campaign created by T-Mobile US with Prophet, [1] and advertising company Publicis.It debuted in March 2013, where the company introduced a new streamlined plan structure for new customers which drops contracts, subsidized phones, coverage fees for data, and early termination fees. [2]
h2o Wireless is a United States-based prepaid cell phone service, that utilizes the AT&T network. [2] It is a brand of mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) Locus Telecommunications, a subsidiary of Telrite Holdings, Inc., since 2019. [1] [3] Locus was formerly a subsidiary of KDDI America corporation, starting in 2010.
USSD on a Sony Ericsson mobile phone (2005). Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD), sometimes referred to as "quick codes" or "feature codes", is a communications protocol used by GSM cellular telephones to communicate with the mobile network operator's computers.
T-Mobile has also used the term to describe Wi-Fi Access Points that it sold to end users to expand their cell phone network to phones equipped to also receive Wi-Fi using a VOIP-like technology. (The models included at least two by Linksys: the WRTU54G-TM and the WRT54G-TM and one by D-Link: the TM-G5240.)