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(#1)
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Junior Member
Newbie
Posts: 1
Join Date: 10 Jan 2010
Country:
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These is no reactivation fee, and to cancel just simply call customer service 888-693-4522 this is a great service and a great company.......... I do not work for the company However I do know them... The are connected to several carriers
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(#2)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Expert
Posts: 344
Join Date: 28 Mar 2005
Location: See flag
Country:
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That's one of the things that would make it a pain to use - each time you activate it for a month, it apparently automatically goes on autobill and you have to remember to call them before it rebills (i.e. no way to simply buy a month of access for a traveller). And hope the phone is answered, and hope that the cancellation is applied, as there is no record of it.
Anyway, given the T-mobile 3G coverage (not a lot, yet) it's of fairly limited use for most, certainly not much use for travel. The way the web site has now been changed to hide the lack of 3G gives a bad impression of the way the company behaves. |
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(#3)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Prophet
Posts: 2,128
Join Date: 10 Dec 2004
Country:
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Quote:
edit: what can people tell us about Wyless? If this deal has just been announced, is that a change of provider, or is Wyless reselling T-mobile anyway? |
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(#4)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Expert
Posts: 342
Join Date: 14 Dec 2004
Location: Connecticut, USA
Country:
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Prepaid 3g data service in the US is not as widely available as in other countries...whether it's GSM or CDMA based. Tends to be more postpaid long-term contract or recurring monthly postpaid. Prepaid wireless broadband data (the heavy duty type used on laptops; not just handset web surfing) is relatively new here.
Suggest the following for prepaid nationwide coverage: VirginMobileUSA MVNO using Sprint CDMA network: Mobile Broadband Service | Virgin Mobile Could be activated and left dormant for up to one year. Caveat is data is best for light usage (rates are a bit expensive) and is limited to the native Sprint network without off-network roaming (but the good news is it is largely 3g). AT&T offers a prepaid broadband plan but 3g coverage is spotty and they are a bit expensive: AT&T offers prepaid wireless broadband | Signal Strength - CNET News Verizon CDMA offers a prepaid broadband plan with extensive 3g coverage but it's pricey: Verizon offers prepaid wireless service for laptop users | Signal Strength - CNET News T-Mobile offers 3g (or in some cases high speed 4g) through resellers like Datajack and others, but coverage areas are somewhat limited. I use an ISP in Oregon called Millenicom: Welcome They do recurring credit card billed 3g data service on Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon. I use their 3g Verizon service (US$60/month for 10 gb of data). It's a good service but it's not true prepaid. Sim Cards: T-Mobile (Mint), AT&T (Mifi device or Kindle), Koko Satphone: InMarSat Broadband US Wireless Data: AT&T postpaid, Sprint (Karma Mobility prepaid) Broadband International Data: SkyRoam VOIP: Skype |
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| us unlimited 3g broadband |
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