Jump to content

Legacy Plan to Unlimited Freedom


derrph

Recommended Posts

I'm currently on the Unlimited My Way and I'm thinking about switching over to the Unlimited Freedom plan. Besides my bill being $15 more and not having mobile hotspot, are there any downsides to this newer plan? For those who did switch off to UF from a legacy plan, what are your thoughts/experiences?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm currently on the Unlimited My Way and I'm thinking about switching over to the Unlimited Freedom plan. Besides my bill being $15 more and not having mobile hotspot, are there any downsides to this newer plan? For those who did switch off to UF from a legacy plan, what are your thoughts/experiences?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I made that same switch about two months ago. Haven't had any problems.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I made that same switch about two months ago. Haven't had any problems.

My only concern is the music portion of the plan. I use Apple Music and at times Tidal and stream at High quality for Apple and HiFi for Tidal. Shouldn't the 1.5mbps be ok for Tidal or do you even think Sprint really enforces the stream restriction?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My only concern is the music portion of the plan. I use Apple Music and at times Tidal and stream at High quality for Apple and HiFi for Tidal. Shouldn't the 1.5mbps be ok for Tidal or do you even think Sprint really enforces the stream restriction?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Not sure about Tidal but I haven't encountered any issues with Apple Music.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

My only concern is the music portion of the plan. I use Apple Music and at times Tidal and stream at High quality for Apple and HiFi for Tidal. Shouldn't the 1.5mbps be ok for Tidal or do you even think Sprint really enforces the stream restriction?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I have the Unlimited Freedom plan and stream Spotify and Pandora on HQ and never run into streaming or quality issues. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have the Unlimited Freedom plan and stream Spotify and Pandora on HQ and never run into streaming or quality issues.

I looked over the UF plan over and over and literally closed my eyes and changed my plan from the Unlimited My Way. Honestly I don't think Sprint monitors the music steaming to its 1.5mbps because I am able to stream Tidal at HiFi and it doesn't miss a beat. The videos for my start out grainy but then kicks into its 1080p. Overall I'm happy with the plan don't miss my legacy plan anymore lol

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • large.unreadcontent.png.6ef00db54e758d06

  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • Posts

    • Today I was driving over in Bothell/Kenmore area. I noticed the site which used to host Sprint eNB 745953 (where Waynita Way NE turns into 100th Ave NE) before it was fully decommissioned last year is now hosting all new T-Mobile gear. The gear isn't live yet but is fully installed. My guess is they plan to decommission the T-Mobile B2/B66 (enB 84647) only site a few blocks up the hill. This is a great move because decommissioning that old site would reduce interference with eNB 84740/175124. At the same time, the new location should notably improve coverage in the geographically shielded area along Waynita/100th.  The weird thing is I can't find a permit for this anywhere!
    • Mint and Ultra: Welcome to the T-Mobile Family! https://www.t-mobile.com/news/business/t-mobile-closes-acquisition-mint-and-ultra-mobile
    • https://www.t-mobile.com/2023-annual-report Most items s4gru members will be aware of, but an interesting read.
    • I've now seen 100 MHz n77 from SoftBank and 100 MHz n78 from NTT. NTT seems to be a bit better south of Osaka, though in some cases it drops down to B19 LTE as some areas around here are pretty rural. SoftBank has n77 around, but it's flakey enough that I switched eSIMs earlier this morning.
    • I'm currently typing this from a bullet train headed from Tokyo to Osaka. Using a roaming eSIM rather than T-Mobile as it's a lot cheaper, but I'll start with T-Mobile's roaming experience. Since I have a business line, I can't add data packs online, so I'm just using the 256 kbps baseline service you get by default. That service runs on Softank 4G. SoftBank has a well-built-out LTE network though, with plenty of B41, falling back to B1/3/8 as needed. 5G roaming from T-Mobile doesn't appear to exist though. I've seen 20+10 MHz B41 when I've looked, generally speaking. WiFi calling works well, and voice calls over LTE work fine too (I forgot to turn WiFi back on after doing some testing, so I expect my bill to be a dollar more next month). I want to say I even got HD voice over the cell network for the VoLTE call I did. I have a bunch of eSIMs and a couple of physical SIMs to try out. I've gotten the eSIMs up and running, but last I checked the physical SIM wasn't working even after activation so I'll run through eSIMs for the moment and update this thread with pSIM info and details on not-Tokyo in the coming days. First off, there's US Mobile's complimentary East Asia eSIM (5GB) that I grabbed before my unlimited plan Stateside expired. That SIM uses SIM Club, routing through Singapore, running on SoftBank LTE and 5G. I've seen 40 MHz n77, as well as 10x10 n28, and have seen download speeds in excess of 200 Mbps with uploads of more than 50 Mbps, though typical speeds are slower. Routing is via Equinix/Packet.net. 5G coverage is rather spotty, but LTE is plenty fast enough; either my phone doesn't want to use the 5G band combos that have more coverage or 5G coverage is just spottier here than in the US (at least on T-Mibile). Latency is as low as 95ms to sites in Singapore (usually closer to 120ms), which is pretty great considering the 3300 mi between Tokyo and Singapore. Next there's Ubigi. It also routes through Singapore via Transatel (despite being owned by NTT), and sites on top of NTT docomo's network. I didn't see NTT 5G in Tokyo when I tested it, but since then I've seen 10x10 n28, and have seen B1/B3/B19 on the LTE side. So far it's not the fastest thing out there, but I'm guessing coverage will be a little better...or maybe not. This was $17 for 10GB. Latency is a bit higher to Singapore, but still under 150ms it seems. Then there's Airalo, which was the cheapest when I bought it at $9 for 10GB. It also routes through Singapore (on Singtel), but on my S24 I have my pick of KDDI (au) or SoftBank. KDDI has extensive B41 coverage and I've seen 20+20 with UL CA. While waiting for the train at HND Terminal 3 (Keikyu line) I hit 250+ Mbps down and 10+ Mbps up...over LTE...with pretty respectable latency numbers (not much above 100ms). This is in adition to supporting SoftBank, also on LTE (my S24 defaulted to KDDI, while my wife's Pixel 8 defaulted to SoftBank and didn't seem to want to connect to KDDI). Of the various carriers mentioned, I'd say this was the best pick, though prices have bumped back up to $18 for the 10GB plan...but it's probably still what I'd pick if I had to pick just one carrier. Then there's Saily, which uses Truphone out of Hong Kong. I haven't used this as much, as I only grabbed 3GB for $7. It runs on NTT but doesn't seem to have 5G access and doesn't seem to have as good speeds. Yes, Hong Kong is way closer to Japan, but latency didn't seem to be any better, at ~150ms. In all cases, I've had reception even in train tunnels and even at high speed on the bullet train, on all three carriers I've tried (I don't think I'll be able to play with a Rakuten SIM, which is rather disappointing). There have been cases where service has degraded, but it looks like you'd have reasonable cell service no matter which of the big three carriers you picked...and since T-Mobile roams on one of them, that's good enough if you're content to buy day passes.
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...