P.S. Some of the ‘big’ carriers, now and then, offer much less expensive ‘plans’. Some event beat the prices in this article, if your ‘Data’ needs are limited.

    • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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      182 years ago

      At some point they told the Telcos you have to offer competition. So a dozen different budget phone services popped up over like the last 15 maybe more years. They all have decent rates and use one of the big 3s infrastructure, so they get the same service levels.

      The big Telcos still exist because people don’t fully understand how the competition works and because people always want the newest iPhone and are bad at math and calculating risk. So they are in a perpetual contract so they can get a free “insured” iphone of the latest variety, while only paying 3x for their cell bill.

      • @MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        “Same service levels” Wrong. Verizon and the other infrastructure owners don’t sell access to their top tier antennae. You’re using the older shit and your traffic is deprioritized. You do not get the same service.

        That doesn’t mean it cannot be worth the price, but know they’re LYING to you when they say you get the exact same service.

        • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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          22 years ago

          Might be true of Verizon. I have seen no difference of AT&T. IDK how you even get on Verizon, are they still doing CDMA?

          • @MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            They share more bands in 5G. Still don’t sell top tier service (at least at the same price).

  • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    232 years ago

    Not all budget plans are necessarily good… I’ll admit to being a cheap fucker. I can afford a top tier cell plan, I just won’t pay for it. :)

    For YEARS I had a Virgin mobile plan, but I had to drop it when, in their infinite wisdom, they dropped Android support and went iOS only.

    They eventually changed their mind and tried to revert back, but the damage was done and they exited the US market ENTIRELY.

    So I sucked it up and went with a Tmobile plan, which was fine, right up until they pushed an update that bricked my phone and they wouldn’t take responsibility for it.

    Sooo… back to MVNO world. Picked Metro PCS, which was under Sprint at the time and had no problems, and 1/2 the price. Everything worked well… and Tmobile bought Sprint and Metro and my reaction was “Oh, HELL NO.” Not being under Tmobile again.

    Thought the Mint commercials were cute, tried them out and found that while the calls and data were fine, there were so many problems with SMS that it was essentially unusable AND they got bought by TMobile…

    So… Visible it is… MVNO under Verizon. 5G speeds in my area aren’t the best, but it’s functional and not Tmobile.

    • @snoopfrog@midwest.social
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      52 years ago

      Team Visible here too. I wanted unlimited so I can stream at work and do some things the firewall would forbid. It’s also just my wife and me, so we don’t need four lines. They’ve been excellent for the three months we’ve had them. It’s my first experience with e-sim, and that has been smooth. I’m a little apprehensive about switching it over when we upgrade phones, but we’ll figure it out.

  • @sanimalp@lemmy.world
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    162 years ago

    My own experience… Paying 200$/month for 4 “unlimited” plans on mobile. Switched to boost mobile aka tmobile and now pay $108/month for 4 “unlimited” plans. I would do it again in a heartbeat.

    • @satanmat@lemmy.world
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      52 years ago

      This where I am as well…

      I know that switching would be cheaper…. It really is just inertia keeping me from moving

      Um… AT&T … what are you really giving me?

  • Pope-King Joe
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    102 years ago

    On US Mobile with 5G UW and unlimited* data for like $25 (including taxes and fees) a month.

    *I get like 30GB of “Premium Data” and unlimited regular data plus 5GB of hotspot.

    • @interceder270@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      You might want to try Visible if you care about hotspot data.

      They have truly unlimited hotspot data, I use it for home internet and mobile. Same price at $25/month.

  • LazaroFilm
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    92 years ago

    I wish free.fr was in the US. It’s the one thing I miss. That and a good warm baguette.

  • SeaJ
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    2 years ago

    I switched to Mint because T-Mobile was getting a little too monopolistic and it was a lot cheaper. Still cheaper but I guess I couldn’t escape the cartels in even the most modest sense. I also get pretty insane download speeds at my house (~750Mbps).

  • 👁️👄👁️
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    62 years ago

    I use Visible which is pretty awesome. $25/mo for unlimited data, and it uses the Verizon network.

    • Nora
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      12 years ago

      I got $10 CAD a month. 1Gb data, unlimited call and text.

      I just need data for emergencies between places. Everywhere has wifi now.

  • ArugulaZ
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    62 years ago

    Problem is, of course, that most of these discount carriers are owned by the big ones. Cricket is AT&T, and Mint is what, Verizon now?

    • Slyme
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      52 years ago

      Mint’s under T-Mobile now, IIRC

  • @cyn@lemmy.world
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    52 years ago

    With net neutrality entering the conversation again, would these MVNO carriers be affected in any way?

  • @protokaiser@lemmy.world
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    52 years ago

    I switched to US Mobile last year. I had a rough month or two with data not working properly, but it’s smooth sailing now for $20/month for 5GB of data.

    • @Coldgoron@lemmy.world
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      72 years ago

      Ive got US mobile also.

      Pros: unlimited talk and text and 1gb of data for 10 bucks a month, verizon towers, wifi calling, normal calls and text have gave me no issue.

      Cons: Customer service is often poor to okay but they do have a chat based support which helps, data absolutely craps out in some areas.

      Hope it helps readers choose.

      • Cosmo
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        22 years ago

        fwiw I had good customer support experience when I accidentally signed up for the wrong plan

  • @interceder270@lemmy.world
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    31 year ago

    I use Visible for mobile and home internet. $25/month with unlimited data.

    They even sent me a free 5G phone when mine was mysteriously no longer going to work with their network ‘upgrades.’ 'Course, they tried to get me to buy one first. :)

  • rustydomino
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    22 years ago

    I’ve been eyeing MVNO plans for awhile now. I bought a 3 month trial of Mint on a spare phone and it seems to work OK. But I’ve heard enough horror stories that I’m still very hesitant of porting my main number over. Downtime is unacceptable especially for key services like SMS.

  • Jayayess1190
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    12 years ago

    I’m on US Mobile paying $18 for 6gb per month. Was in Madrid, Spain for almost 2 years during the pandemic and paid €15 on Vodafone for even more. And it rolled over so I eventually had around 100Gb.

    • themadcodger
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      22 years ago

      Hey, me too! I was there the same time as you and had pretty much the same plan. I never once thought about my data usage.