Jump to content

Marcelo Claure, Town Hall Meetings, New Family Share Pack Plan, Unlimited Individual Plan, Discussion Thread


joshuam

Recommended Posts

You are quite obsessed.

 

Look in the mirror.  A person who has been expelled from a place but continues to return exhibits obsession.

 

Obsession for maximus.  By Calvin Klein.

 

220.jpg

 

AJ

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please stay on topic.

 

Thank you.  But S4GRU staff has the latitude to determine what is topical discussion.

 

AJ

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The best and most clear response from the FCC to a Public Agency that I can ever recall regarding 800 Rebanding. Oakland is practically blackmailing Sprint saying we will hold you up on anything and everything related to Rebanding because we suffer from interference in a few places, of which, is mostly AT&T. Including holding millions of dollars in equipment that they aren't even using. What a joke.

 

Sprint is not in the clear, of course. They will have to address the interference, albeit outside of rebanding. And they will have to entertain Oakland's change order request, and go to mediation if they don't approve it. But I love the language the FCC used here in slicing right through the BS and outline a practical approach that allows the rebanding process to complete and still give Oakland an opportunity to resolve its issues within the processes available.

 

Common sense rules the day. Now if the FCC would just throw out the licenses of spectrum squatters who never have met their build out requirements years ago in the same effective manner.

This is the crap that Sprint has been dealing with for the last ten years. I was involved peripherally but I quit in disgust. FCC is spineless. They should have had penalized PS a long time ago.

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is the crap that Sprint has been dealing with for the last ten years. I was involved peripherally but I quit in disgust. FCC is spineless. They should have had penalized PS a long time ago.

 

I agree.  That's what makes this toothy and strong response from the FCC stand out so much.  To another government agency, no less.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

what is confusing to me is, they did not specify *how* your supposed to watch TWD on your sprint phone... is it via sprint tv (probably not), an AMC app or website, some other app/website, or simple piracy ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

what is confusing to me is, they did not specify *how* your supposed to watch TWD on your sprint phone... is it via sprint tv (probably not), an AMC app or website, some other app/website, or simple piracy ?

Piracy probably, sprint seems to turn a blind eye to torrenting, at least if its within reason.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

what is confusing to me is, they did not specify *how* your supposed to watch TWD on your sprint phone... is it via sprint tv (probably not), an AMC app or website, some other app/website, or simple piracy ?

 

You can watch The Walking Dead on Netflix or Sling TV.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Another FCC order, though not as interesting as the last: http://bit.ly/188Hspn

 

- Trip

Thanks for posting this. I read virtually the whole thing over my coffee this morning. Very interesting.

 

It amazes me that the Arizona Public Service Co. has managed to waste a whole year in the rebanding process fighting an argument it knew it would lose. The precedent has been set through other rebanders, repeatedly.

 

It ends up damaging Sprint significantly that ASPC dragged them through a long mediation process, then rejecting the Mediation and go back to the FCC to be final arbiter. Harris' quote is too high. Even after the FCC generous take off on the costs, by a million bucks.

 

But in my mind, even though Sprint was successful, it should have paid the extra million last year and they could be completing rebanding now. That million bucks is nothing to Sprint, all things considered. And delaying B26 deployment in Arizona is not a good idea. They'll be lucky if they can get ASPC done before December 31st. And ASPC is going to do this as slow as they can get away with now that they have lost.

 

I do get why Sprint fought back. If they overpaid every licensee that had to move by a million bucks, it would have seriously jeopardized the whole program and set a dangerous precedent. However, this is the tail end of rebanding and speed of the few remaining licensees relocating has a real and demonstrable effect on its customer base. And that has got to be more than a million bucks. But I'm not sure where the ASPC sites are located and exactly what areas will be impacted if they are the last hold out in Arizona.

 

Thanks again for the post. Love these. :tu:

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for posting this. I read virtually the whole thing over my coffee this morning. Very interesting.

It amazes me that the Arizona Public Service Co. has managed to waste a whole year in the rebanding process fighting an argument it knew it would lose. The precedent has been set through other rebanders, repeatedly.

It ends up damaging Sprint significantly that ASPC dragged them through a long mediation process, then rejecting the Mediation and go back to the FCC to be final arbiter. Harris' quote is too high. Even after the FCC generous take off on the costs, by a million bucks.

But in my mind, even though Sprint was successful, it should have paid the extra million last year and they could be completing rebanding now. That million bucks is nothing to Sprint, all things considered. And delaying B26 deployment in Arizona is not a good idea. They'll be lucky if they can get ASPC done before December 31st. And ASPC is going to do this as slow as they can get away with now that they have lost.

I do get why Sprint fought back. If they overpaid every licensee that had to move by a million bucks, it would have seriously jeopardized the whole program and set a dangerous precedent. However, this is the tail end of rebanding and speed of the few remaining licensees relocating has a real and demonstrable effect on its customer base. And that has got to be more than a million bucks. But I'm not sure where the ASPC sites are located and exactly what areas will be impacted if they are the last hold out in Arizona.

Thanks again for the post. Love these. :tu:

My reading of the fcc doc makes me believe sprint is under legal obligations not to over pay. It states that Fcc rules require the cheapest option that can be completed in a reasonable amount of time. With that said who would complain if sprint over paid? I have no idea.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

wasn't sure where to put this so i'll just throw it in here so more people see it.

 

last fall 3 of my lines got new phones on easy pay, they did the sprint buy back on their phones for a bill credit. last month the bill credit finally showed up. my normal bill is $445/mo and i had buyback credits of $728 and am setup on auto pay. So last month the credit covered my bill and nothing happened with auto pay because it said i had a negative balance of $283.

 

now this month rolls around and i'm showing an alert on my account that says i'm past due and i am unable to make any changes to my services online until i make a payment. After a painful conversation with sprint chat support i come to find out that my buyback credits only apply to my service charges and NOT to any phone installments (from easy pay). so i technically have a past due amount of $129 which was all the phone payments from last month.

 

no where in the system did it alert me that i would still need to pay the phone installments and being on auto pay it did not realize this either and so it didn't charge me anything since it showed i had a negative balance.

 

so just wanted to let everyone know that if you get any kind of bill credit or buyback credits that would cover your entire monthly bill and you have an easy pay phone installment on your account that you still need to pay that, even if the system doesn't tell you to, otherwise your account will be flagged as past due.

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

wasn't sure where to put this so i'll just throw it in here so more people see it.

 

last fall 3 of my lines got new phones on easy pay, they did the sprint buy back on their phones for a bill credit. last month the bill credit finally showed up. my normal bill is $445/mo and i had buyback credits of $728 and am setup on auto pay. So last month the credit covered my bill and nothing happened with auto pay because it said i had a negative balance of $283.

 

now this month rolls around and i'm showing an alert on my account that says i'm past due and i am unable to make any changes to my services online until i make a payment. After a painful conversation with sprint chat support i come to find out that my buyback credits only apply to my service charges and NOT to any phone installments (from easy pay). so i technically have a past due amount of $129 which was all the phone payments from last month.

 

no where in the system did it alert me that i would still need to pay the phone installments and being on auto pay it did not realize this either and so it didn't charge me anything since it showed i had a negative balance.

 

so just wanted to let everyone know that if you get any kind of bill credit or buyback credits that would cover your entire monthly bill and you have an easy pay phone installment on your account that you still need to pay that, even if the system doesn't tell you to, otherwise your account will be flagged as past due.

Had the similar problem only my credit didn't cover the entire bill. The easy pay messed up on how it billed me and I got a credit for that but according to sprint the way they did the credit causes my account to go pass due. That was two bills ago and I am still trying to get thus fixed. I have paid two bill since then my account shows I am paid in full but also says I am passed due. It has everyone I talk to at sprint stumped.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

AT&T says it won't chase after customers as price wars ease

 

http://www.cnet.com/news/as-wireless-wars-cool-down-at-t-says-it-wont-chase-customers/

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

 

It's not the first time they've made a similar statement, so how does this add to the latest news, let alone Sprint news?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It'll be easier to poach att customers.

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

 

*Check*

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The problem with cites in California is they are trying to get money from any sources they can because they spent themselves into a hole and can't get out of it because of the tax base dwindling.

 

Dwindling tax base? Huh? Oakland is growing rapidly both in population and in commercial economy.

 

16,000 new residents in 3 years.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

The big deal here is that it's paid within 15 days! That is super impressive. Usually it's the "within 2-3 billing cycles" or whatever. 15 days is really awesome.

  • Like 8
Link to comment
Share on other sites

*sigh* Fire up US Cellular LTE roaming and I'll be right over...
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

    • In the conference call they had two question on additional spectrum. One was the 800 spectrum. They are not certain what will happen, thus have not really put it into their plans either way (sale or no sale). The do have a reserve level. It is seen as great for new technologies which I presume is IOT or 5g slices.  They did not bite on use of their c-band or DOD.  mmWave rapidly approaching deadlines not mentioned at all. FWA brushes on this as it deals with underutilized spectrum on a sector by sector basis.  They are willing to take more money to allow FWA to be mobile (think RV or camping). Unsure if this represents a higher priority, for example, RVs in Walmart parking lots where mobile needs all the capacity. In terms of FWA capacity, their offload strategy is fiber through joint ventures where T-Mobile does the marketing, sales, and customer support while the fiber company does the network planning and installation.  50%-50% financial split not being consolidated into their books. I think discussion of other spectrum would have diluted the fiber joint venture discussion. They do have a fund which one use is to purchase new spectrum. Sale of the 800Mhz would go into this. It should be noted that they continue to buy 2.5Ghz spectrum from schools etc to replace leases. They will have a conference this fall  to update their overall strategies. Other notes from the call are 75% of the phones on the network are 5g. About 85% of their sites have n41, n25, and n71. 93% of traffic is on midband.  SA is also adding to their performance advantage, which they figure is still ahead of other carriers by two years. It took two weeks to put the auction 108 spectrum to use at their existing sites. Mention was also made that their site spacing was designed for midrange thus no gaps in n41 coverage, while competitors was designed for lowband thus toggles back and forth for n77.  
    • The manual network selection sounds like it isn't always scanning NR, hence Dish not showing up. Your easiest way to force Dish is going to be forcing the phone into NR-only mode (*#*#4636#*#* menu?), since rainbow sims don't support SA on T-Mobile.
    • "The company’s unique multi-layer approach to 5G, with dedicated standalone 5G deployed nationwide across 600MHz, 1.9GHz, and 2.5GHz delivers customers a consistently strong experience, with 85% of 5G traffic on sites with all three spectrum bands deployed." Meanwhile they are very close to a construction deadline in June for 850Mhz of mmWave in most of Ohio iirc. No reported sightings.
    • T-Mobile Delivers Industry-Leading Customer, Service Revenue and Profitability Growth in Q1 2024, and Raises 2024 Guidance https://www.t-mobile.com/news/business/t-mobile-q1-2024-earnings — — — — — I find it funny that when they talk about their spectrum layers they're saying n71, n25, and n41. They're completely avoiding talking about mmWave.
    • Was true in my market. Likely means a higher percentage of 5g phones in your market.
  • Recently Browsing

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