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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      1 year 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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        “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.

    • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      It is absolutely insane to me the level of monopoly three companies hold. To the point where entering the market is nigh but impossible.

      But of course “three different entities battling it out doesn’t make a monopoly” but it does if they happen to work together juuuust enough to keep things in the shitty situation that currently exists for consumers.

        • Cows Look Like Maps@sh.itjust.works
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          I was in the UK and got a SIM card for travel and when the person working at the store heard I visited from Canada, they said they heard we have the most expensive internet and mobile plans. I couldn’t believe how cheap it was there. In fact, the Sim card there didn’t charge roaming for almost every country, including the USA… Except it excluded Canada, North Korea and a few others lol.

          Problem is, the smaller companies that the big 3 lease their infrastructure to here are often more expensive. There’s been multiple cases of Rogers et al. bullying the smaller companies and making their service unstable or decreasing speeds randomly. I’m sure I’s the same in the states as our regulatory board the CRTC essentially being a lobbying board lol.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    1 year 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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      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.

    • notthebees@reddthat.com
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      I’m in a flipped situation. My MVNO (confiner l consumer cellular) used t mobile and now they switched to ATT. My internet is faster (70 mbps speed test) but my service is less consistent. I’ll get full service in a subway tunnel but none at my house.

      • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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        That’s not unusual for AT&T. I remember back in the day their own CEO had to go out to his driveway to get service.

  • sanimalp@lemmy.world
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    1 year 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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      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?

  • Railison@aussie.zone
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    MVNOs are fantastic value once they get up and running in healthy competition. Australia has heaps of them and IIRC some of the cheapest mobile data charges in the world.

    ETA: according to data from cable.co.uk, Australia ranks 15th cheapest, 68¢ per GB on average.

    • zeroxxx@lemmy.my.id
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      Australia, which are regarded as one of the most expensive country to live in, have the cheapest data plan in the world.

      Not sure which way the wind blows.

  • Pope-King Joe@lemmy.world
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    1 year 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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      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.

  • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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    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).

    • vegetarian_pacemaker@lemmynsfw.com
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      You get 35fb of roaming and if I haven’t mistaken you can still call mobiles and landlines for free under their 20eur plan. If that is cheaper than what you have in the US, probably go for that? Use a US sim not for data but just so that someone can call you.

  • ArugulaZ@kbin.social
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    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?

  • protokaiser@lemmy.world
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    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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      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.

    • Dave.@aussie.zone
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      (looks at his Australian MVNO plan of unlimited calls and text and 100GB for ~USD30 and his ~2.3TB of monthly rolled-over data available)

      Oh , it was 80GB a month, now it’s 100. Cool.

      Anyway, uh, that’s great, mate, good to hear you’re getting value for money over there compared to what’s normally offered.

      Competition is a good thing, keep encouraging it.

  • cyn@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

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

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Americans have long been conditioned to believe that when they buy a cellphone, the next step is to pick a wireless plan from one of the big carriers: Verizon, AT&T or T-Mobile.

    The no-frill plans often have trade-offs, including slower download speeds, since Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile subscribers have priority access to faster network performance.

    Yet in the past few years, so much has changed that I can now confidently recommend discount phone plans for most people, including white-collar professionals and Instagram-obsessed youths.

    It lets you immediately activate an extra phone line without needing to insert a physical SIM card, which makes experimenting with an off-brand wireless service easier and less intimidating.

    Consumers can sign up for discount phone plans by buying a physical SIM card from a website or retail store, though I recommend eSIM as the way.

    Based on the results measured with the Speedtest app, Cricket and Visible had comparable performances, with download speeds of 154 megabits per second, on average.


    The original article contains 1,293 words, the summary contains 164 words. Saved 87%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • interceder270@lemmy.world
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    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. :)