T-Mobile to end subsidies, offer only full-priced phones and value plans in 2013

Earlier today, T-Mobile announced that it will be offering Apple products starting in 2013, but another thing that the carrier is introducing in 2013 is the death of subsidized devices, and the introduction of only cheap value plans. This means you’ll have to pay full price for a handset, but the plans themselves will be cheaper than before.

The company plans to move entirely to its Value Plans in 2013, and they say that the new strategy will make the company’s voice and data lineup more competitive, especially for subscribers who don’t mind paying full price for their handsets or bringing over an unlocked device from another carrier.

However, if you don’t want to pay the full price for a new phone up front, T-Mobile is planning to offer devices at subsidized prices, and will let you finance the rest over a 20 month or so. Plus, T-Mobile said that 80% of its activations last quarter were for Value Plans, which suggests people are actually into those plans the most.

Full details haven’t been released, such as if the financing part of buying a full-priced phone will require at least some sort of contract, but we’re guessing that the carrier will have a decent system in place to take care of someone who backs out of a plan early while still owing money on a phone.

[via FierceWireless]


T-Mobile to end subsidies, offer only full-priced phones and value plans in 2013 is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

iPad mini 4G hits EE’s LTE from £50

Apple’s 4G-blessed iPad mini has gone on sale with UK carrier EE today, with the 7.9-inch tablet subsidized down to £50 ($80) if you’re willing to commit to two years of LTE. The iPad mini WiFi + Cellular is offered with 3GB, 5GB, or 8GB of LTE data per month, priced at £25.99, £30.99, or £35.99 per month respectively. Alternatively, there’s a cheaper way to get online at LTE speeds if you’re willing to pay full-whack for the tablet.

EE offers a 4G SIM-only tablet plan, based on a rolling 30-day contract with no two-year commitment. It’s priced at £15.99 per month with 5GB of data, and includes the first month of data free as well. Eventually, it’ll offer inclusive WiFi through BT’s network of hotspots.

If you can foot the upfront bill, it’s worth your while. Pay for a full-price iPad mini 16GB 4G (£269 £369 in the UK) and two years of LTE service on the 5GB plan will come to £736.77 in all; in comparison, EE’s subsidized device and the same 5GB plan will cost £793.75 over the same 24-month period.

As we found with the Verizon iPad mini 4G, the tablet makes for a very usable mobile hotspot. We saw runtimes in wireless sharing mode far in excess of what any traditional mobile hotspot would offer, with the added reassurance that it’s not your phone getting drained.

More on the iPad mini in our full review.


iPad mini 4G hits EE’s LTE from £50 is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

AT&T Galaxy S III gets official Android 4.1 Jelly Bean update

AT&T has released Android 4.1 Jelly Bean for Samsung’s Galaxy S III, bringing the smartphone up to date with Swype, the new blocking mode, and other changes. Released via Samsung’s Kies app, rather than as an OTA update, the much-anticipated software release also includes the Music Hub and tweaks to Facebook support on the phone, though any aesthetic changes are primarily masked by TouchWiz.

Of course, while Samsung and AT&T have been busy fettling Android 4.1 for the Galaxy S III, Google has been working on releasing the subsequent version. Android 4.2 is already out for the Samsung-made Galaxy Nexus and LG’s Nexus 4, though the differences between it and v4.1 are relatively slight.

Samsung confirmed the Jelly Bean update was coming to the Galaxy S III back in October, though left it up to individual carriers to decide on specific release schedules as well as whether to push out the update OTA or via Kies. Certain European locations began seeing Android 4.1 all the way back in September.

Your Galaxy S III will need to be running baseband version  I747UCLEM, I747UCLG1, I747UCLH9, or I747UCLI5 in order for the update to work; that can be checked by going to “About Phone” in the settings. You can download Kies for Windows and Mac, meanwhile, here.


AT&T Galaxy S III gets official Android 4.1 Jelly Bean update is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

The Amazing History and Figures of the First Nuclear-Powered Aircraft Carrier in the World

The USS Enterprise, the first nuclear aircraft carrier in the world, has been officially retired today at a ceremony in Norfolk, Virginia—special appearance by Captain Kirk included. Since her comissioning in November 1961, she has served under ten Commanders-in-Chief, including John F. Kennedy during the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. More »

Verizon lauded by Consumer Reports: Only LTE earns AT&T approval

Verizon’s cellphone service has come out top of the pack for major US carriers, with sterling 4G performance the only thing to rescue AT&T from poor ratings across the board. Based on a survey of more than 63,000 subscribers by Consumer Reports, the feedback praised Verizon for its voice and data quality, the knowledge of staff, and how promptly issues were resolved.

In contrast, AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint were all given “middling to low marks” in those categories, with voice and text service judged to be particularly disappointing.

However, while Verizon may have got to LTE first, it isn’t deemed the best 4G offering of all the networks. “[AT&T] users reported the fewest problems with that higher-speed service, which most new smart phones now use” Consumer Reports concludes.

It’s prepaid service which gets the biggest nod, however, with Consumer Reports recommending several no-frills and/or regional providers for the individual or family that wants the most for their dollar. US Cellular takes the top recommendation, with Credo Mobile in second place; if you’re not in the coverage of either, Verizon is in third place.

In fact, the organization found, the majority of those who jumped from contract to prepaid made a monthly saving. Two-thirds saved more than $20 per month, helping offset the higher upfront cost of the device.


Verizon lauded by Consumer Reports: Only LTE earns AT&T approval is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


EE bumps LTE mobile broadband data by up to 3GB a month

UK 4G carrier EE has quietly tweaked its mobile broadband plans, increasing the amount of data subscribers get per month by as much as 3GB. The new plans – which are also joined by a monthly rolling plan for those contract-averse – stick at the same price points as before, beginning at £15.99 on the 18-month agreement, but now offer a choice of 3GB, 5GB, or 8GB of LTE data.

The £15.99 plan, which previously came with 2GB of LTE data, now comes with 3GB, whereas the £20.99 plan gets 5GB rather than 3GB as before. Finally, the most expensive mobile broadband package, at £25.99 per month, climbs from 5GB to 8GB. Those prices also include some degree of subsidy on either a USB modem or a mobile WiFi hotspot.

Meanwhile, the monthly rolling plan is a new mobile data introduction, offering the freedom of no minimum contract term. Offered SIM-only for £15.99 per month for 5GB of data, there’s also a £12.99/1GB option including a modem.

At time of writing, there’s no mention of the SIM-only data plans on EE’s site, though the webstore has been updated with the new contract data allowances. Those already subscribed to a plan will automatically have their allotments increased, EE says.

[via ZDNet]


EE bumps LTE mobile broadband data by up to 3GB a month is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


A Google plan to kill carriers with WiFi is all too believable

Could you live your mobile life on WiFi? Attempts to ween users off of expensive, subsidized smartphone deals have been more successful this year than every before; word earlier today that Google had acquired a WiFi hotspot company – and which later turned out to be false – was believable in part because the search company is a prime candidate for ousting cellular from the mobile equation. The ICOA deal may be fake, but Google‘s appetite to ditch the traditional carriers and strike out more or less alone isn’t new.

The original Nexus One was the company’s first effort at that, an attempt to bypass the commonplace subsidized phone deals with an unlocked handset, and relegate the carriers themselves to “dumb pipe” status. It proved to be an idea ahead of its time; smartphone-naive shoppers blanched at a $529 sticker price in January 2010, and Google had to satisfy itself with carrier distribution just like everybody else.

Though we’re only two years past that point, the reception to the unlocked Nexus 4 has been considerably warmer. The phone’s $299 off-contract price didn’t hurt – the same, it’s worth noting, as some high-profile phones have launched, complete with a subsidy and two-year agreement – on carriers like Verizon and AT&T – and Google’s apparent inability to keep them in stock suggests that demand is strong.

Along the way we’ve seen a growing play for the connectivity market by Google. The company already has an agreement with Boingo, subsidizing or offering free access in locations across the US, and of course has its Google Fiber network beginning in Kansas City. It’s still early days, mind, though there are plenty of other wireless hotspot providers out there, primarily in cities, transit locations, and venues like restaurants.

“When does WiFi become pervasive enough to make users sufficiently confident?”

The question is one of saturation, then, and comfort levels: at what point does WiFi coverage become pervasive enough to make users confident enough to abandon traditional carriers. Would the knowledge that 80-percent of the places you can usually be found had WiFi internet access – such as for messaging, and browsing, and VoIP – put you at ease for not having an active cellphone plan? For some that figure would need to be much higher – 90-, or 95-percent even – whereas others, making fewer calls perhaps, might be willing to go down to 50- or 60-percent coverage in return for cheaper monthly bills. Cellphone coverage isn’t 100-percent, after all.

One reluctance might well be down to hotspot unfamiliarity: just how much of the time could you be using a WiFi connection rather than your carrier’s data pipe? It’s not a metric that the carriers themselves are keen to share – focused, instead, on maximizing 3G/4G revenues – though Google could handle that transition relatively easily. Google Now already tracks your location (it can count your steps each month, like a fancy pedometer, or tell you the timetables for the nearest public transport); it would be a small matter to put together a monthly summary of the amount of time you’d spent within the wireless range of a WiFi hotspot.

Even if that degree of pervasiveness wasn’t quite enough to tick the comfort box, it could be sufficient to at least break down some of the monthly bill. Splitting off data use to a hotspot, and using the carriers merely for traditional voice calls and text messaging, would certainly trim service fees, as well as ensuring that things like emergency calling is still available. There’s also room for more unusual price plans, such as we’ve seen Google and others negotiate for tablets and Chromebooks: would you pay another, say, $80 on top of your off-contract phone for twelve months of minimal calls and messages – just enough to tide you through those times you were out of range of WiFi?

Breaking free of carriers and their demands isn’t the sole reserve of Google – Steve Jobs wanted to do it with WiFi and the first iPhone, and Microsoft has Skype for Windows Phone 8 – but the search giant may well be in the best position to actually deliver it. That might not be with ICOA, but it would be mighty surprising if Google wasn’t looking for a way to further democratize the mobile data pipe in its favor.


A Google plan to kill carriers with WiFi is all too believable is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Pakistan threatens booty calls with off-peak plan prohibition

Cheap late night voice minutes are under threat in Pakistan, after regulators blamed low-cost tariffs for promoting “vulgarity” that are in opposition with the “values of the country.” The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority demanded local carriers cease the contentious price “late night packages”, the Times of India reports, after complaints around “the promotion of vulgarity” by pushing them through text message adverts.

“We have received a number of complaints from the Supreme Court of Pakistan, the Standing Committee of the parliament, (parliamentarians) and subscribers regarding the promotion of vulgarity through such advertisements and have therefore asked cellular mobile operators to immediately discontinue such packages and to present compliance reports,” PTA chairman Farooq Awan said in a statement.

According to the PTA, carriers “unanimously admitted” that their advertising contravened unwritten guidelines in a meeting with regulatory representatives. The promotions were “not in line” with society’s moral values, so the network execs supposedly agreed.

However, sources at cellphone companies speaking to the Daily Times claim that a joint petition has been submitted protesting the PTA demands, arguing that there is no official law that regulates content on telephony services. The plans – offering calls during off-peak times as cheaply as 1 Indian rupee ($0.02) per hour – are essential for low-income customers, the carriers point out, in addition to helping short up the networks’ earnings by promoting use between midnight and 7am, times that would traditionally see fewer calls.

It’s not the first move Pakistan regulators have made to censor mobile communications in the country. A year ago, a blocking system banning text messages containing “obscene” words was put into operation, while the government has also explored more wholesale limits on internet access.


Pakistan threatens booty calls with off-peak plan prohibition is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Jolla’s Sailfish spills its MeeGo-reborn secrets: Carrier & chip deals inked

MeeGo refugee Jolla has demonstrated its new Sailfish OS today, as well as announcing a deal with ST-Ericsson to run the platform on its mobile chips, and a carrier deal with Finland’s DNA. Revealed back in October, Sailfish focuses on “effortless multitasking” with the ability to run multiple apps simultaneously and even interact with them directly from the homescreen view. It also attempts to cut down on the taps, swipes, and pulls involved in checking status updates and notifications, and promises easy compatibility with Android apps.

The homescreen-level interaction, Jolla suggests, means Sailfish will be the most streamlined and speedy OS for users to navigate through. For instance, they’ll be able to pause a song or end an ongoing call without having to open the respective apps themselves: you can swipe a finger across the music player app thumbnail to the left to pause playback, or to the right to skip to the next track.

Sailfish also has a so-called “Pulley Menu” for “fast and effortless interaction” and the open-source SDK is already being fleshed out. It consists of components including Qt, the Mer Core, and the Linux kernel, and can turn its hand to duties on smartphones, tablet, smart TVs, in-car systems, and other applications. Jolla will have a copy of the version shown off today “very soon.”

According to Jolla, many Android apps will run on Jolla devices with no modifications. However, there’ll need to be tweaks made if best use of Sailfish is desired “If you want to take advantage of all UI and other features of Sailfish OS and make yourapplications fast,” the Sailfish SDK wiki explains, ”you can port your applications to native QT/QML.” That’s the full version of Qt, too, along with HTML5, though there won’t be DRM support.

Jolla also has its first carrier onboard, with DNA set to get the first Sailfish-based devices and be part of what the company says will be “a network of partners” around the OS “during the coming year.”

Jolla isn’t content with just one chipset partner, however. “ST-Ericsson’s NovaThor platform combined with Sailfish OS will enable vendors to bring highly competitive mobile products to the market. We welcome other players in the mobile industry to join and contribute to this game changing movement” Jolla CEO Marc Dillon said today. “We also target to announce other chipset provider partnerships soon.”

Update: MTV3 has a hands-on video demo of Sailfish here[Thanks Kote!]


Jolla’s Sailfish spills its MeeGo-reborn secrets: Carrier & chip deals inked is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


EE’s delayed LTE SIM-only plans go on sale

UK 4G carrier EE has finally begun offering its SIM-only plans, having delayed the launch of the off-contract LTE packages following tardy testing troubles. The new plans – which rely on users bringing their own 4G-compatible device, such as the unlocked iPhone 5 Apple stores offer in Europe – offer a monthly discount on the regular charges, though exactly how much you save depends on how willing you are to tie yourself to the carrier.

“We’re really pleased to announce our superfast 4GEE SIM-only plans have launched today for customers. They are available initially to buy online or over the phone through our customer services team” an EE spokesperson told us today. “They will also soon be available in store and we’ll confirm a start date very shortly. The 12 month plans are £15 per month cheaper than our 24 month plans that include handsets – customers just need to pick their data plan.”

There are four tiers to choose from, starting at £21 per month for 500GB of data, then rising to £26 for 1GB, £31 for 3GB, or £36 for 5GB; no 8GB option at this stage. All plans include unlimited calls and texts.

Currently, there’s no sign of the 30-day rolling contract option, which only saves £5 off of the monthly fee, in return for even greater freedom to leave the network if you’re not getting on with its 4G coverage. There’s also apparently the option for a £5 roaming add-on – for unlimited roaming minutes and texts – though only with a 24-month plan.

More details on the EE SIM-only plans here.


EE’s delayed LTE SIM-only plans go on sale is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.