Sony Xperia Z3 back in T-Mobile shelves again
The Sony Xperia Z3 went surprisingly missing from T-Mobile’s online store recently. We figured that the smartphone was gone for good. But it’s clearly not the case as the 2014 Sony flagship has now made a comeback on the carrier’s site.
The Xperia Z3 on T-Mobile is also more affordable now with the price now standing at $499.99, down from $630. So it seems like T-Mobile and Sony are making a conscious effort to ensure that the smartphone does well in the U.S. market. The Xperia Z3 is also available through Verizon Wireless under the Xperia Z3v moniker.
The smartphone comes with a 5.2 inch 1080p display, a 20.7-megapixel camera on the back, a 2.2-megapixel front camera, a quad core 2.5 GHz Snapdragon 801 chipset, 3GB of RAM, 32GB internal storage (expandable up to 128GB), Android 5.0 Lollipop and a 3,100 mAh battery.
Head over to the link below to get the Xperia Z3 from T-Mobile.
Source: T-Mobile
Via: Pocketnow
Come comment on this article: Sony Xperia Z3 back in T-Mobile shelves again
Sony Xperia Z3 re-added to T-Mobile’s lineup with a price reduction

It wasn’t too long ago that we saw T-Mobile remove Sony’s Xperia Z3 from its lineup, no longer offering the device through its online store. Even a T-Mobile representative confirmed the removal through Twitter, stating that the Z3 will no longer be offered by the carrier. It looks like the representative gave us some false information, because in a recent development, T-Mobile has, for some reason, re-added the Z3 to its online store with a pretty nice discount.

When the phone was available through T-Mo previously, it would run you a hefty $630 without a contract. Now if you’d like to get your hands on the device, it will only run you $499.92 off-contract, or $20.83 per month over a 24-month span. This price drop likely has a lot to do with Sony’s recent announcement of the Xperia Z4 – an iterative take on last year’s flagship.
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We’re not sure how long the phone will be available on the Un-carrier, so you may want to take advantage of this deal before it’s too late. Head over to the source link below if you’re interested.
A cheat sheet to Project Fi, Google’s mobile phone service
Rumors of Google breaking into the wireless carrier game have been fodder for scoops, breathless reports and thinkpieces for years now, and for the longest time it looked like the search giant just couldn’t make it happen. Yesterday the search giant put all that to rest. Project Fi is finally here (if invite-only and fully compatible with one phone) — here’s what you absolutely need to know about it.
What is Project Fi?
At its most basic, Project Fi is a mobile phone service that promises unlimited domestic talk and text, unlimited international messaging, tethering and 2G-only international service in over 120 countries (thanks to T-Mobile’s rather dope roaming agreements) for as low as $30 a month. You get to decide how much data you want to pay for — more on that later — and you’ll get a tidy refund for whatever data you don’t use when the month is over.
Really though, the best way to look at Fi is as an ambitious experiment in mashing up existing networks. The heart of the service is a mobile mesh that combines Sprint and T-Mobile’s coverage areas with over a million of WiFi hotspots meant to give you the most reliable service wherever you are. Some of those hotspots will pop up exactly where you expect them — like 7,000 US Starbucks stores, for instance — while plans to bolster free public WiFi networks in cities with Google Fiber are well known. And the rest? Well, they’re all open networks (your data will get routed through a Google VPN to keep it secure) that Google’s got in a quality control database. Of course, how well this’ll actually work in practice is another story.
How do I use it?

The beauty of Project Fi is that, despite all the crazy-cool network jumping going on, you just use your phone the way you always would. Once you sign up, you’ll get a new phone number or bring over your existing one, and you can access it from a slew of compatible devices. It’s sort of like what Apple’s done with iMessage and its phone-friendly Continuity features, except across any computer, tablet or smartphone that plays nice with Google Hangouts. Want to check your voicemail or send your mom a cheesy Mother’s Day text? You can do it from your office Chromebook, that iPad chilling on your coffee table, and even that Surface Pro you keep trying to use on airplane tray tables. The name of the game here is seamlessness.
Same goes for your actual phone calls. Let’s say you’re on one of Google’s approved WiFi networks — if you’re on a call and wander too far from the source, the phone will switch you onto Sprint or T-Mobile’s data network depending on which is stronger to keep things flowing sans interruptions. Thing is, Fi’s meatiest part only works with one device right now: The Nexus 6. Motorola’s phablet the only device with a radio certified to shift between Sprint and T-Mobile’s networks without batting a proverbial eyelash and it’ll cost you (but more on that later). It’s possible that Project Fi will also support the older, cheaper Nexus 5 at some point since the same phone could be activated with either Sprint or T-Mobile service, but for now N5 owners are out of luck.
OK, I’ll bite — how do I get it?

You didn’t expect Google to open this up to the masses all willy-nilly, did you? Just like Gmail, Wave and Google+ before it, Project Fi is an invite-only Early Access Program for the time being, so you’ll have to throw your name into the hat by registering here. Google hasn’t said exactly when that first batch of invites will start hitting inboxes, but you should expect a response one way or the other within 30 days of registration. The requirements are pretty straightforward, though: As long as you live an area where Fi has coverage and you own (or are willing to buy) a Nexus 6, you’re eligible to take the service for a spin. Thing is, neither T-Mobile nor Sprint have spectacular rural coverage, so those of you in more remote climes — sorry Montana — might not get your invites for a while.
Is it really such a good deal?

Erm, maybe. It all comes down to what you need, and let’s be real — Fi isn’t perfect for everyone. First off, there are no family plans here, making Fi a better choice for individual enthusiasts itching for something a little different. If that’s you, you’re going to pay $20 a month for the so-called “Fi basic” noted above. Each gigabyte of data service will cost you $10 after that, and that’s where things can get a little iffy. T-Mobile’s most basic plan with unlimited talk and text plus 1GB of high-speed data will run you $50 a month, while the same amount nets you 3GB of data across Sprint and T-Mobile’s networks on Fi. If you’re on a cushy, older T-Mobile plan though, you might be better staying put. CEO John Legere announced earlier this month that all of those juicy promo plans aren’t going anywhere (unless you’re still clinging to one with unlimited data).
Meanwhile, Sprint offers a flat $60 rate that promises unlimited talk, texting and data access each month, along with even slower international roaming in a handful of countries. It’s important to note that some of Project Fi’s broad strokes aren’t exactly new — we’ve seen upstarts like Republic Wireless and FreedomPop push the vision of a WiFi-centric mobile service for years now, so you could get a kinda-sorta similar experience for quite a bit less. Republic, for example, offers unlimited talk, text and 4G data for $40, though you’ll lose out on Fi’s network span and international chops.
All of this presumes you’re OK toting around a whopper like the Nexus 6 as your daily driver. Since Project Fi has ditched the contract model completely, there aren’t any hardware subsidies either – that means you’ll have to pay $649 for a 32GB model or $699 for the 64GB version if you haven’t already. Thankfully, you can pay for the phone in monthly installments… if you pass a credit check, anyway.
Why does this matter?

For the vast majority of people, Project Fi will just be another cool, mildly kooky thing Google cooked up, and chances are they’ll never think about it again. When Sundar Pichai said Fi was like the company’s Nexus device program, he wasn’t kidding – it’s not a mainstream service, but one geared toward people who really care about new, ambitious, arguably half-formed products. Early adopters. People who clamor for the bleeding edge, the newest of the new.
What Fi represents, though, is another story entirely. At this point it’s not clear how visible the network switches will actually be, but considering how seamless Google wants to make the process, we wouldn’t be surprised if you the user never actually know whether you’re cruising on Sprint or T-Mobile’s spectrum. If that really is the case, Google’s basically turned both carriers — carriers that hate each other, no less — into dumb pipes that deliver your texts and Japanese game show videos without you ever having to deal with a pushy salesperson. Google is very respectfully telling these companies that they’re commodities, parts of a thoughtful mobile experience the carriers themselves can’t create. More importantly, it’s showing us how the wireless landscape, the one with carriers at each others throats, sort of sucks. Whether or not Fi succeeds financially is one thing. The bigger question (and the one we can’t answer just yet) is whether the industry shifts to respond to Google’s work. Pipe dream? Wishful thinking? We’ll soon find out.
Filed under: Mobile
How to check Project Fi coverage in your area
By now you’ve probably heard an awful lot about Google’s announcement about providing a new network called Project Fi. The network piggybacks off of Sprint’s and T-Mobile‘s networks and supports making calls and texts over a WiFi connection when an LTE signal isn’t detected. If you’re considering your options as to whether to ditch your current provider and join Project Fi, you might want to check the signal coverage map first to see if you’re covered.
All you have to do is visit the Project Fi web page, type in your zip code and the map will show what sort of network coverage you can expect. Besides the mobile network coverage, Project Fi subscribers will also be able to use Google’s estimated 1 million WiFi hotspots situated around the country.
Source: Project Fi
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John Legere praises Project Fi for contributing “fresh blood and fresh thinking”
There are existing two wireless networks that Google’s Project Fi operates on in addition to more than one million WiFi hotspots. They belong to Sprint and T-Mobile. So those two carriers are bound to receive their fair share of attention in the coming weeks and months as people in the United States explore what Google has to offer with Project Fi. John Legere, the CEO of T-Mobile, is really excited about Project Fi because of its ability to deliver a new, alternative approach. That is something that Legere feels the wireless industry lacks.
In a company blog post, Legere reflects on the history T-Mobile and Google share. The two worked on launching the G1, the world’s first Android smartphone. Soon, the Nexus 6 on T-Mobile will have WiFi calling activated and become the first Nexus device to have that feature. Allowing Project Fi to use its network is just another step taken together by T-Mobile and Google.
Here is where Legere draws a connection between T-Mobile and Google’s take on utilizing a WiFi connection:
“One of the coolest things about Project Fi − IMHO − is Google’s new technology that allows them to move customers between Wi-Fi and cellular partner networks based on the network that’s the fastest at any given time.
Last fall, T-Mobile led the industry in un-leashing Wi-Fi, basically turning every Wi-Fi connection in the world into a T-Mobile tower. Now, Project Fi lets customers easily access public Wi-Fi and cellular networks − there’s no doubt that we share a vision that is great for customers.
Since the cellular connection will be made based on network speed, we expect to capture the largest share of traffic coming from Project Fi customers – and chances are good that these customers are going to be riding on America’s fastest nationwide 4G LTE network. The T-Mobile Data Strong™ network! If Project Fi customers are anything like our own, we expect they’ll be data-hungry!”
The T-Mobile CEO, in addition to being ecstatic about exposing T-Mobile’s network to more people, applauds Google’s work for doing something “that could directly benefit tomorrow’s American wireless customers.” Legere wants the industry to shift away from old practices and into an area of “fresh blood and fresh thinking.”
Source: T-Mobile
Come comment on this article: John Legere praises Project Fi for contributing “fresh blood and fresh thinking”
T-Mobile CEO John Legere formally announces partnership with Google for Project Fi

For those who haven’t heard the news, Google has officially unveiled Project Fi – the company’s foray into the U.S. wireless industry. Offering its users a cheap and simple alternative to the other mobile carriers out there, Project Fi will be able to switch between Sprint and T-Mobile’s networks and Wi-Fi connections around the nation, automatically connecting your Nexus 6 to the network with the strongest signal at that time.
T-Mobile CEO John Legere has just formally announced the company’s partnership with Google to help create Project Fi, offering up a few insights on the companies’ collaboration:
Project Fi is going to make people think differently about wireless—and I love that. Anything that shakes up the industry status quo is a good thing—for both US wireless customers and T-Mobile.
Google has well established their brand as a technology innovator that has benefited customers in a ton of fantastic ways. So, when our friends in Mountain View approached us with their ideas for changing up wireless, it was a no-brainer to team up with them again.
T-Mobile and Google’s partnership goes way back to the early days of Android. The carrier launched the first ever Android smartphone, the T-Mobile G1, and has since held close ties with Google. In classic Legere fashion, here are a few other tidbits the CEO had to say:
Disruption is what the Un-carrier does. Our mission is to change the wireless industry for the better on behalf of all wireless consumers and business customers…. So if you’re looking for a partner who lives and breathes innovation − and has a network built for today’s data-centric world and data-hungry customers − it’s easy! You’re going to want to come to the Un-carrier. And we’re glad Google did just that.
He also comments that while Project Fi doesn’t offer all of the same features that T-Mobile does like HD Voice or Wi-Fi Calling, he’s still confident that Project Fi will be a great value to many users around the States.
To read Legere’s full announcement, check out the source link below. Otherwise, you can head here to learn more about Google’s Project Fi service.
Google’s Project Fi service turns multiple phone networks into one
Got a Nexus 6? Itching to dump your traditional wireless service provider for something a bit more ambitious? Google’s got you covered. After months of speculation and a not-so-subtle nod from Sundar Pichai at Mobile World Congress, the search giant’s new mobile phone service — Project Fi — is finally official. We’re still sifting through the details, but the company’s plan is both as savvy and as unorthodox as we’d expect: Instead of trying to build out and maintain its own nationwide network of cell towers and repeaters, Google’s instead combining Sprint and T-Mobile’s coverage footprints with millions of pre-vetted WiFi hotspots to provide users with the fastest, most seamless mobile experience it can in real-time.
Well, that’s the plan anyway. You’re probably just clamoring for the invite link at this point (here you go), but it’s important to note that Google created Fi to fill in the gaps that already exist in our more-mobile-by-the-day lives.

Google says that if you initiate a phone call while you’re connected to WiFi, for instance, the service will automatically hand it off to whichever cellular network is strongest where you are. Speaking of WiFi, that secure connection feature spotted in a new build of Android is indeed part of the mix here too, with Google acting as a gatekeeper for your device’s data when it’s connected to one of those verified hotspots. Naturally, most Android phones out there won’t play nice with that sort extensive, prolonged network hopping, which means only Nexus 6 owners with a special Fi SIM card can join in on the fun for the time beingGoogle Hangouts can be used to check your voicemail and fire off your daily load of banal text messages too; it’s almost like a fully realized version of Google Voice, itself a grand experiment in mobile that eventually grew outdated and devalued as the companies priorities shifted.
Hopefully, Google stays committed this time. So, what’ll Fi cost you? To answer that question, we’ve got to dig into the basics of the Fi plan first. Everyone who signs up for the service gets the same core features — unlimited domestic calls, unlimited US and international texting, WiFi tethering and free data coverage in over 120 countries — for a base price of $20. From there, all you’re really adding are data costs, and each gigabyte of high-speed access will set you back an additional $10. Yep, that means you can get started on Google’s own mobile network (or “network of networks,” as it’s calling it) for as little as $30 a month if you can skate by on 1GB of LTE data. Oh, and the icing on the cake: You’ll get a refund each month for whatever data you haven’t burned through. Given Google’s general distaste for selling things with contracts, it shouldn’t shock you to hear that you won’t be inking any multi-year deals to use Fi either.
It’s a little too early to call Project Fi a “game-changer,” but I don’t think it’s quite fair for Google to keep likening it to the long-running Nexus device program. For the most part, Nexus phones and tablets aren’t designed to be adored by the masses — they’re meant to be proofs of concept, heralds for what Android could and should be. Fi arguably falls into that mold too as a semi-Utopian network concept that pairs two bitter rivals like Sprint and T-Mobile under a single umbrella of seamlessness, but everything else? The dead simple pricing and the monthly refunds and consumer-first network hopping? That just might be enough to get people thinking about what their carriers should be doing for them.
Filed under: Mobile
Source: Project Fi
WSJ: Google will unveil its wireless service as early as tomorrow

We’ve certainly heard a slew of rumors regarding Google’s wireless service lately, and it looks like we may get a lot more information from the company sometime soon. Google will reportedly begin to roll out its U.S. wireless service as early as Wednesday, April 22nd, according to a new report out of The Wall Street Journal.
Rumors of the wireless service have been circulating around the web, stating that the service will only work on Sprint and T-Mobile’s networks, and will switch between the two depending on which mobile carrier has the strongest network signal at that time. There have also been a few rumors explaining that the service will only work with the company’s Nexus 6 handset, at least at the beginning.
Perhaps the most interesting bit of this whole report is that customers will only need to pay for the amount of mobile data they use each month – a business method that makes perfect sense, yet no carrier has adopted this method thus far. Also, the new MVNO will be able to route calls and data through Wi-Fi networks, which could greatly reduce customers’ monthly bills.
We’ve heard the majority of these rumors in the past, but this is the first time we’re hearing anything regarding the release date of the mobile service. And other than the information presented above, no other details have been outed quite yet. One thing is for certain, though. Google isn’t creating its own wireless service to directly compete with other carriers – it’s doing it to prove something. Odds are, whenever this service is announced, it will bring something to the table that could potentially influence the way other carriers work.
We need to remember that for now, this is just a rumor. But if this report has any validity to it, we may know a lot more about Google’s wireless service very soon.
T-Mobile punches up Walmart Family plans with more data
T-Mobile’s press release reveals that its Walmart Family Mobile wireless plans will offer an extra 500MB of LTE data for the same price, starting April 18. These plans are part of a postpaid, no annual contract wireless service offer in Walmart stores and on Walmart.com. Existing customers will receive the extra data automatically.
The plans are as follows:
- $29.88/month for Unlimited Talk, Text & Data with up to 1GB of data (500MB previously)
- $39.88/month for Unlimited Talk, Text & Data with up to 3GB of data (2.5GB previously)
T-Mobile customers who sign up for multiple lines can save $5 for each additional line, as always.
The post T-Mobile punches up Walmart Family plans with more data appeared first on AndroidGuys.
T-Mobile’s Walmart Family Mobile plans now offer more data for no extra charge

T-Mobile has just announced that its Walmart Family Mobile plans are getting more data for the same price. Starting Saturday, April 18th (tomorrow) you can get the $29.88 per month plan with 1GB of 4G LTE data (up from 500MB) and the $39.88 per month plan with 3GB of 4G LTE data (up from 2.5GB). Each plan still offers unlimited talk and text, and there’s no need for users to sign up for additional data – T-Mobile will automatically bump up the data amount for all customers currently on the plans.
Read more: Best T-Mobile prepaid Android phones
Customers who sign up for multiple lines at one time will be able to save $5 for each additional line. Offered nationwide through Walmart retail stores and Walmart.com, these plans are convenient, low-cost alternatives to other postpaid plans found around the mobile industry. If you’d like more information, check out the source link below.









