T-Mobile Adds 16 New Binge On and Music Freedom Partners - MacRumors
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T-Mobile Adds 16 New Binge On and Music Freedom Partners

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T-Mobile announced today that its free unlimited music and video streaming programs Music Freedom and Binge On now support an additional sixteen services.

Music-Freedom-Binge-On
Binge On is a free incentive that enables T-Mobile customers on a qualifying Simple Choice plan to stream unlimited 480p video from dozens of partnered services, including Netflix, HBO NOW, Hulu, and YouTube, without any of the data consumed counting towards their plans. Music Freedom works the same way for streaming music services including Apple Music, Spotify, Pandora, and Google Play Music.


The new Binge On partners include Dailymotion, EPIX, OVGuide, OWNZONES, Viki, YipTV, and 120 Sports, in addition to the three Viacom Networks channels Nickelodeon, Spike, and TV Land. Likewise, the new Music Freedom partners include Amazon Music, Chilltrax, ESPN Radio, OHIO.FM, PreDanz, and Uforia. All sixteen new services are free to stream on qualifying plans starting today.

Update: T-Mobile is also offering up to $200 off any new iPad with the purchase of any new iPhone financed with an Equipment Installment Plan. In addition, the carrier is offering 4 lines with unlimited talk, text, and data, and up to 10GB of LTE data per line, for $35 a line. Both promotions start on April 6 and run for a limited time.

Top Rated Comments

vertsix Avatar
130 months ago
If it weren't for Music Freedom, I'd eat through the 10GB of data I get a month like it is candy in like two weeks.

With this, my data consumption is dramatically lower. Like, dramatically. And better yet, unused data carries over.

I'm so glad to be a T-Mobile customer.

Also, I might add I get ridiculous speeds like these:



Attachment Image
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
BeSweeet Avatar
130 months ago
The dude tells me: Oh, we just upgraded our entire network so signal strength should not be an issue anywhere! Do you have an iPhone 6s? No? Well, to use the upgraded network you need a 6s due to its upgraded chipset.

Yeah.

/nonsequitur.
To their defense, the iPhone has a terrible antenna compared to pretty much every Android (and Windows Phone, for that matter) device. The 6s is only a step up due to band 12 LTE support.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Mindcrime Avatar
130 months ago
When I came back to the States in December, I went with T-Mobile because they had better "unlimited" data than the other companies, and because of their Binge On feature. I brought my iPhone 6 from abroad with me.

A few weeks later, a customer support person called me and asked if I minded answering some questions - am I satisfied, what could they do better, etc. I told them their signal strength suck balls. In my apartment building, which is all wood, I get 1 bar. Everywhere I go, I get 1 bar. In the T-Mobile store, I get 1 fricken bar.

The dude tells me: Oh, we just upgraded our entire network so signal strength should not be an issue anywhere! Do you have an iPhone 6s? No? Well, to use the upgraded network you need a 6s due to its upgraded chipset.

Yeah.

/nonsequitur.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
130 months ago
To their defense, the iPhone has a terrible antenna compared to pretty much every Android (and Windows Phone, for that matter) device. The 6s is only a step up due to band 12 LTE support.
Yeah, it's disingenuous to market that the network is "better" somehow but it's only "better" when the network uses bands no one else has ever used before. To access that "better" network, you need to BUY a new phone that costs $500-$800 (depending on iPhone model) to take advantage of the network and coverage they're advertising on TV.

Here's how it works-

First, T-Mobile's Band 12 Network is 10-15MHz in size; depending on the license acquired in that area and also use of an interference guard-band. To compare, AT&T and Verizon's Cellular Band (850Mhz; Band 5) is 25Mhz uplink and 25MHz downlink (50Mhz in total size).

T-Mobile's primary network is in the 1900MHz PCS (60MHz) and AWS (generally 35MHz) range. With 95Mhz of airwaves, of the "old network", and 10-15Mhz on the "new network" chances are more likely you'll be on their "old network" even when using the service. The marketing brilliance is that the phone will register bars of the strongest signal it can "see". This is something Sprint has done for years. So T-Mobile is like a used car dealer who wants to sell you a car that can get to a 250MPH, and marketed that way, but they conveniently forget to disclose that the car computer limits your speed to 75Mph. Also, PCS and AWS airwaves don't travel through walls and over long distances very easily; T-Mobile's regulatory affairs (Kathleen Ham) said this in a public statement.

There are caveats-
Another thing which makes T-Mobile's network unique is that T-Mobile's equipment is located on antenna structures and prime real estate which AT&T and Verizon originally built in the 1980s and 1990s. So it's not a network T-Mobile actually built. The problem is that many of the old towers can't be zoned for multiple carriers/companies due to structure and age. Connection speeds (where available) are limited to the speed of the cable network in the area. T-Mobile uses Hybird Coax-Fibre in their network. It's cheaper than digging up roads to install fiber optics.

Next, in areas where there aren't many people, or places like WalMart that sell T-Mobile service, T-Mobile will likely forego the investment all-together.

Basically, 9-times out of 10, you'd be better off with Cricket Wireless. T-Mobile just threw money at lease agreements with American Tower (Verizon), and Crown Castle (AT&T) and had the ad company make some flashy ads because it's easier to make flashy ads than training employees.

The thing is that T-Mobile wants its customers to know that the network will get even better after the upcoming 600MHz Auction. However (and this is very important) those un-auctioned bands are still in use in many areas, haven't been cleared or even assigned yet. Replacing a 100,000-watt antenna and transmission equipment takes more planning than a T-Mobile antenna on a roof with 40-watts of power. Still, and what that means is that there doesn't exist a phone sold today, from any company, which is compatible with those airwaves that haven't even been sold.

Overall, it's definitely very clever marketing, and yes, Virginia, T-Mobile lies, but you'd need to find an attorney who knows about RF engineering concepts to file (and win) a deceptive advertising lawsuit; or a complaint at the Federal Trade Commission on the basis of false advertising.
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Plutonius Avatar
130 months ago
T Mobile keeps getting better every day. I really can't wait to switch!
I haven't seen any improvement with coverage and was forced to switch to AT&T from T-Mobile this year.
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)
trife Avatar
130 months ago
Not if you use speedtest many times, it eats your data.;)
speedtest doesn't count against your data with TMO!!
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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