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Paul King Al, I don't know why your comments are coming through straight to the database but even manually attempting to sync them out to the comment system I'm getting an error. An extra line after the four can be added for a further 20 per month, up to six lines.
#T MOBILE 4 LINES FOR $100 LICENSE#
Win a free Tasker license from Tasker and Pocketables! 9-year-old contest evidently was not a closed Post Paul King Unfortunately you will have to travel back to 2013.I almost posted my big stack of WiFi routers I've worked with that didn't have this problem that I still have sitting around and have not managed to give away.Īt 54 days my Nest Wifi + Mesh is going to a farm in upstate New York where it can run and chase butterflies and live its best life and look at the bunnies This pricing is set to end on January 2,2016 afterwards, standard data allotments will go back down to 1GB per line. And they have the nerve to call it “Best-Ever Pricing.” I just couldn’t stand by without speaking up and calling them on their BS. It infuriates me that they’re selling this to hardworking families who could use that money for more important things. Because their deal is no deal at all, and next to T-Mobile’s Simple Choice Family Plan, AT&T’s “Best-Ever Pricing for Families” is a joke. AT&T’s sinking some serious dough into marketing their latest-greatest family pricing, which strikes me as funny. T-Mobile is ready to take on AT&Ts most recent add campaign by. Leaving my office last week, I pulled alongside a bus covered with yet another ad for AT&T’s “Best-Ever Pricing” for families. T-Mobile announces new promotional family: 4 lines with 10GB of data for 100. In typical John Legere style, he wrote in a blog post this morning: It’s also important to note that the new plan includes all the regular Uncarrier perks, such as unlimited talk and text, free international texting and data usage, and unlimited streaming from select music services. Unlike AT&T, though, T-Mobile does not charge overages, and throttles people once they hit their individual high speed data limits. One important distinction to make between T-Mobile’s and AT&T’s pricing is that T-Mobile gives each user 2.5GB of individual data, while AT&T allows family members to share the data unequally between each line. T-Mobile today introduced its first unlimited plan since merging with Sprint, with an offer of four lines for 100 per month, including 5G access for those. The new pricing will be available beginning on July 30. Galaxy A33 vs Galaxy A32 5G: know what changes between Samsung phones