- Joined
- Apr 29, 2023
- Messages
- 1,312
Just go with Mint Mobile and be done. No hassle, low fees.
Most folks don't realize the FFC provides frequency licenses based on counties..so you x brand phone may work fine in county x but not work in county y....its probably a FCC license issue.Watching people that can't comprehend that different cell providers work better in different areas of the country argue back and forth is amusing.
Second the inreach. And will always be nice tk have a backup option if/when cell phones start to use satellite messaging.EXACTLY!
You do know that’s the TMobile network and that company is fully owned by TMobile.Just go with Mint Mobile and be done. No hassle, low fees.
Except that T Mobile’s coverage map shows very little coverage for Montana, and with Mint I’ve had pretty good service out there. So something is different.You do know that’s the TMobile network and that company is fully owned by TMobile.
Can’t be, Mint is a T-Mobile company. The only difference is Mint only uses T-mobiles network while T-mobile has roaming contracts with other providers for their customers so T-mobile service would have more coverage.Except that T Mobile’s coverage map shows very little coverage for Montana, and with Mint I’ve had pretty good service out there. So something is different.
I’ve had good coverage with Mint. Also, the dude was complaining about hassle and price raising with T Mobile. None of that nonsense with Mint. You can manage basically everything through the app. It’s easy and headache free.Can’t be, Mint is a T-Mobile company. The only difference is Mint only uses T-mobiles network while T-mobile has roaming contracts with other providers for their customers so T-mobile service would have more coverage.
In the end, the coverage map you see in MT with Mint is the T-mobile network.
Yep, Verizon in the southeast for sure. Tmobile can't hardly get off a main road, same as Sprint beep beep.Most folks don't realize the FFC provides frequency licenses based on counties..so you x brand phone may work fine in county x but not work in county y....its probably a FCC license issue.
Att built out the west coast so it has a larger foorprint, ie better coverage, VzW built out the east coast.
Other carries like US cell go where the big guys don't build because the pop model doesn't work for them..US Cell works great in the mountains and on coast of NC on there towers, they have roaming agreement for the middle of the state with the big guys...so US cell customers will get throttled in say Raleigh, compared to ATT/VzW. When I traveled a lot I had a US Cell phone and a VzW phone.
Actually he was complaining with the hassle of Costco, he wasn’t at a T-Mobile owned store.I’ve had good coverage with Mint. Also, the dude was complaining about hassle and price raising with T Mobile. None of that nonsense with Mint. You can manage basically everything through the app. It’s easy and headache free.
Here it was Aigate wireless who was bought by Sprint and Suncom who was bought by Tmo...Then Tmo bought Sprint.Yep, Verizon in the southeast for sure. Tmobile can't hardly get off a main road, same as Sprint beep beep.
Someone mentioned lesser carriers doing more frilly stuff to lure customers, yep, TMoTMobile
https://www.t-mobile.com/coverage/satellite-phone-service
T-Mobile Direct to Cell Pricing
T-Mobile has published pricing for their Starlink Direct to Cell access after the free beta ends. Depends on your plan and carrier:
T-Mobile Go5G plan: Free, included
Other T-Mobile plans: $15/month (early adopters can lock in $10/month)
Plans with other carriers: $20/month