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Other cellular providers, including Verizon, T-Mobile and Cricket Wireless, have also reported outages. Verizon and T-Mobile said those affected had been trying to contact AT&T users.
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.
[113] [114] T-Mobile US and Verizon Wireless have deployed similar late-stage upgrades in a larger number of markets than AT&T, but promote them as being upgrades to their 4G LTE service. T-Mobile mocked the branding via a video on Twitter, showing a person applying a sticky note reading "9G" over the LTE indicator on an iPhone, captioned "didn ...
As of June 2, 2019, the T-Mobile ONE and ONE Plus plans have been retired, and replaced by the new Magenta plans. [166] On June 2, 2019, T-Mobile announced the launch of Magenta Plus. T-Mobile has since discontinued this plan, but it has upgraded the Magenta plan with 100 GB of premium data, while the high-speed hotspot data was increased to 5 GB.
Comparing plans, Verizon offers its unlimited one-phone plan for $75 a month ($25 more than Consumer Cellular), AT&T’s version of this plan is $65.99 a month ($15.99 more), and T-Mobile’s plan ...
Apart from their main spectrum holdings across large regions in the country (listed below) the major US carriers (AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile & Verizon) also hold various Cellular Market Area (CMA) and/or Economic Area (EA) licenses for the AWS 1700 band, as well as Major Trading Area (MTA) and/or Basic Trading Area (BTA) licenses for the PCS 1900 band.
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.
Montana; former Get Mobile Inc., [85] SmartCall, LLC; acquired by T-Mobile in 2017; [146] MNC withdrawn [112] 310: 310: T-Mobile: Not operational: GSM 1900: Formerly Aerial Communications [82] 310: 311: Farmers Wireless: Not operational: GSM 1900: NE Alabama; acquired by AT&T in 2008 310: 320: Cellular One: Smith Bagley, Inc. Operational: GSM ...