7/22/2023 0 Comments Sprint 4 lines vs 1 line![]() ![]() ![]() Would you trust your dating profile to Facebook? Trying to take on Tinder and Match, Facebook announced plans to start a dating service, but, really-would you trust more of your love info with the social network? Like we did with Facebook and Google, we downloaded the personal information Apple had collected and report the findings. The social network brought animated lipstick to a Sephora app and more at the F8 developer conference. Photographer Anthony Quintano reveals his great backwards selfie smartphone trick on Talking Tech.įacebook's move to augmented reality. The $9.95-monthly moviegoing subscription service had not included that option for new subscribers since mid-April, but the removal of the $9.95 movie-a-day monthly plan led to an online outcry. New subscribers to MoviePass can once again take advantage of its one-movie-per-day offering. MoviePass is bringing back movie a day subscriptions. Products includ the Dish Hopper, Logitech Harmony remote controls, smart lights from ADT, Xiaomi, and IKEA, window treatments from Hunter Douglas, air conditioners and humidifiers from Hisense, televisions and other appliances from LG, and security cameras, alarms and door locks, from Arlo, ADT, First Alert, Vivint, August, Schlage, and Panasonic. The Google Assistant is now in 5,000 smart home devices, reports the search giant. Have you done it yet? (We did on Thursday and suggest if you haven't, you do it now.) Twitter suggested all of us change our passwords immediately. Over 300 million Twitter passwords were hacked. Will you now be tracked by Facebook suggesting ads for beachfront restaurants and hiking facilities when you say that you like "long walks on the beach?" That's Facebook's challenge-winning over skeptical consumers. No word on when this will debut, or exactly how it will work, but the social network did reveal that members will be able to announce their status privately within the groups and events section of the site. It doesn’t take a brain surgeon to read through the plans and see which companies are giving consumers the most for their money.įacebook said it would start a dating service. Sprint’s family plan is a bargain priced $100 for two lines, but additional lines are free and you get the free subscription to Hulu. T-Mobile charges $160 for 4 with the free hot spot, unlimited data, Netflix and free international data and texting AT&T will also cut back on your speed "when the network is congested," the company says. Additionally, Verizon's unlimited plan is capped-meaning if you use too much of it, Verizon will cut back on your speed.ĪT&T’s family plan is $180 without the hot spot, or $210 with it, plus the free HBO. If you want unlimited, you need to step up to the $200 monthly plan-plus taxes and fees. It’s the add-ons and the bundles where you see the big difference.Ī four-person Verizon family plan goes to $160 with a free mobile hot spot, but it’s one with limited data. In a nutshell, for one line of service with unlimited data, Sprint is the lowest at $65 monthly, followed by T-Mobile and Verizon at $70 and $75 for AT&T. Sadly, rates are still sky high for all the carriers, and it's really hard to compare their terms. Sprint has free Hulu and AT&T complimentary HBO. Monthly freebies, like T-Mobile's Netflix on the house. The speed is slower than back home, but it beats paying the average $10 a day to use your phone internationally that Verizon quoted me on a Japan trip before I switched. International data and texts. T-Mobile offers the ability to make these in 140 countries at no additional charge. The end of the two-year contract, and the offer to buy out your current contract to switch. That's what we had back in the early days of the smartphone revolution, only to see the carriers pull back on it when we started using it all the time. Lowered rates and ushered in the return of unlimited data. The spin on the $26 billion merger is that by combining, the wireless industry will be more competitive and the contenders can have more oomph to be ready for 5G, the next step in wireless that will be way stronger than the 4G we have today.īut let's take a quick look at recent history, and the consumer-friendly innovations T-Mobile sold to us: the big two, Verizon and AT&T, continue to charge more and offer fewer benefits than scrappy No. While the language may seem different, little has changed. The proposed mega-merger of T-Mobile and Sprint meant it was time to go back to the big four wireless carriers to compare pricing, and get a real sense of deja vu.
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