Who is metro pcs




















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Find an awesome new phone—or bring one you already love. Starting in October, Metro by T-Mobile now gives you two brand new data plans plus more value on existing plans.

And Metro by T-Mobile launches with new all-unlimited plans, including a tier that features Amazon Prime, making it the only U. Plus, the first and only wireless brand to include Google One, a subscription with expanded cloud storage and mobile backup. Actually, T-Mobile has been the parent company of Metro since So, our customers have been enjoying the T-Mobile network since then.

Customers have the option of doing nothing and continue to receive the same great service they have enjoyed from Metro. And when the new plans launch in October, customers have the choice to change to the new plans featuring unlimited high-speed data all month long, streaming video, cloud storage and more if they want to. Unfortunately, no. Yes, of course! Sounds like an integration nightmare. But because this change will happen over several years, most people will probably naturally upgrade to a new phone that will work on the new network.

And for those who aren't inclined to change handsets within a year or 18 months, T-Mobile will likely offer incentives. But the reality is that you will eventually have to upgrade your handset. Will I still be able to keep my low-cost prepaid service or is T-Mobile going to get rid of that? In Europe it's different. But in the U. It's merely a payment method coupled with a no contract. It's strong and it's where the growth is. Judging from these comments and the fact that T-Mobile has its own innovative prepaid offering that also allows you to bring your own device to the network, I think that T-Mobile will try to preserve the offering that MetroPCS has.

There is the classic archaic high subsidy and lock-up on the contract side, and then the other end is a straightforward pay-as-you-go model. But we think you can mix and match those offers. The bottom line is that T-Mobile will likely offer a variety of options for consumers.

So I imagine they will keep the regular pay-as-you-go model, but they'll also offer other options for consumers, too. Experts say that this much spectrum is ideal for an LTE deployment because it gives substantial capacity. What this means for consumers is that T-Mobile's LTE network will be faster and will be able to handle more usage.

With this in mind, it's conceivable that T-Mobile will continue to allow unlimited data usage. Customers who pay a bit more for their service can get unfettered data use. T-Mobile still offers another service for value customers, where the service is slowed down or throttled when a threshold is crossed. The only catch with the "truly unlimited" service is that customers are not allowed to use their smartphones as a modem to attach other devices to the Internet.

With the additional spectrum from MetroPCS, T-Mobile will have a lot more capacity, which means it can accommodate more usage. So I don't think the company will get rid of unlimited data. But I also think there will still be some restrictions. And I don't imagine that the cheaper prepaid plans that MetroPCS offers will have the truly unlimited data option.



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