Showing posts with label Deals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deals. Show all posts

How To Get The Newest AT&T 5G Phone Deal for $1 Per Month With No Trade-in Required

$1 per month phone deals

Terms and conditions on new smartphone deals for both new and existing customers get our best smartphone deals.

Promotion value varies by which new device is being purchased and the value of your trade-in device.

Up to $800 max bill credit with the purchase of Samsung Galaxy S22, S22+, S22 Ultra 5G, Z Flip3, Z Fold3 5G or Google Pixel 6/ 6 Pro and trade-in a smartphone valued at $35 or above prior to completing condition assessment

Up to $700 max bill credit with the purchase of Apple iPhone 13, 13 mini, 13 Pro, 13 Pro Max, and trade-in a smartphone valued at $95 or above after condition assessment

Up to $350 max bill credit with the purchase of Apple iPhone 13, 13 mini, 13 Pro, 13 Pro Max and trade-in a smartphone valued between $35 and $94.99 after condition assessment

Up to $300 max bill credit with the purchase of Apple iPad Air (2020) and trade-in any device valued at $20 or above after condition assessment

Limited time offer. Available in select locations.

How to redeem smartphone offers:

Purchase eligible device on a qualifying installment agreement including taxes on full retail price (upfront) and a $30 activation/upgrade fee.

Add a new line of service or upgrade an existing line.

Activate postpaid unlimited wireless service (min. $75/mo. for new unlimited customers before discounts). AT&T may temporarily slow data speeds if the network is busy.

Trade in an eligible Smartphone within 30 days of activation

Use code TRADEOFFER22 at checkout for smartphone offers and 300TRADE for tablets, watches, and connected device offers. Trade-in value will reflect Promotion Selected after entering code as value is given via monthly bill credits

Important Notes:

The phone number entered on the trade-in should match the phone number of the device purchased. If a different number is entered it could impact promotion eligibility

Credits start within 3 bills after trade-in is completed and will be applied in equal amounts over the term of an installment agreement. You will receive catch-up credits once bill credits start. Credit will not exceed the lower of the device cost or the max credit amount as defined above.

If you cancel wireless service, your credits will end and you’ll owe the remaining balance on the installment agreement for the device purchased.

For new lines, if you cancel service on any other line on your account within 90 days of activating the line under this offer, device credits will stop.

If buying on the AT&T Installment Plan with Next Up, the customer is responsible and will not receive any credits for the additional $5/mo. Next Up upgrade feature.

Qualifying Installment Plan:

Requires a qualifying 0% APR installment agreement (36-mo. term from $13.89/mo. up to $52.78/mo. based on device purchased) Other installment options may be available and vary by location.

$0 down for well-qualified customers only or down payment may be required and depends on a variety of factors.

Eligible Trade-in Smartphones:

This is not an early upgrade program. The Trade-in device may not be on the existing installment plan and trade-in does not relieve obligations under any AT&T installment agreement program or other AT&T Return and Exchange programs.

Eligible trade-in devices are subject to change at any time and without notice.

Eligible Trade-in Smartphones for $700 Apple iPhone 13 series (Using code TRADEOFFER22):

Must meet AT&T Trade-in Program requirements and have a minimum trade-in value of $95 after device condition assessment has been completed.

Eligible devices:

Apple: iPhone X, XR, XS, XS Max, 11, 11 Pro, 11 Pro Max, 12, 12 mini, 12 Pro, 12 Pro Max, 13, 13 mini, 13 Pro, 13 Pro Max, SE (3rdGen)

Samsung: S10, S10+, S10 5G, S10e, S10 Lite, Note10, Fold, Fold 5G, S20 5G, S20 Ultra 5G, S20+, Note10+, Note10+ 5G, Note20, Note20 Ultra 5G, S20 FE, S20 FE 5G, S21 5G, S21+ 5G, S21 Ultra 5G, S22, S22+, S22 Ultra, ZFold2 5G, Z Flip, Z Flip 5G, Z Flip3 5G, Z Fold3 5G

Google: Pixel 4, Pixel 4 XL, Pixel 4a, Pixel 5, Pixel 5a, Pixel 6, Pixel 6 Pro

LG: V60 ThinQ, Wing 5G

Other: OnePlus 9 5G, OnePlus 9 Pro 5G, ZTE Red Magic 3, Microsoft Surface Duo

Eligible Trade-in Smartphones for $800 Samsung Galaxy S22, S22+, S22 Ultra 5G, Z Flip3, Z Fold3 5G, Google Pixel 6/6 Pro (Using code TRADEOFFER22):

Must meet AT&T Trade-in Program requirements and have a trade-in value of $35+ before device condition assessment has been completed or a Samsung Galaxy S/Note in any condition.

Eligible devices:

Apple: iPhone 7, 7 Plus, SE (2nd Gen), SE (3rdGen), iPhone 8, 8+, X, XR, XS, XS Max, 11, 11 Pro, 11 Pro Max, 12, 12 mini, 12 Pro, 12 Pro Max, 13, 13 mini, 13 Pro, 13 Pro Max

Samsung: S, S 4G, S Aviator, SL, S Blaze, S Duos, S Duos 2, S Glide, SII, SII HD, SII LTE SII Plus, SII Skyrocket, SII X, SIII, SIII Mini, SIII Mini VE, S Lightray 4G, S Plus, S Relay, S Showcase, S Vibrant, S3 Neo, S4, S4 Active, S4 BE, S4 Duos, S4 Mini, S4 Triband, S4 X, S4 Zoom, S5, S5 Mini, S5 Sport, S5 Active, S6, S6 Active, Edge+ Duos, S6 Edge, S6 Edge TD, S6 Edge+, S7, S7 Active, S7 Edge, S8, S8 Active, S8 Duos, A50, A50s, A51, A70, S8+, S9, S9+, S9+ Duos, A71, A71 5G, S10, S10+, S10 5G, S10e, S10 Lite, Note, Note II, Note3, Note3 Neo, Note4, Note4 Duos, Note4 S, Note Edge, Note5, Note5 Duos, Note7, Note8, Note9, Note10, S20, S20 5G, S20+, S22, S22+, S22 Ultra, Note10+, Note10+ 5G, Z Flip, S20 FE, S20 FE 5G, S21 5G, XCover Pro, Fold, Fold 5G, S20 Ultra 5G, Note20, Note20 Ultra 5G, S21+ 5G, S21 Ultra 5G, ZFold2 5G, Z Flip3 5G, Z Fold3 5G

Google: Pixel 3, 3 XL, 3a, 3a XL, 4, Pixel 4 XL, Pixel 4a, Pixel 5, Pixel 5a, Pixel 6, Pixel 6 Pro

LG: Stylo 6, V50 ThinQ, V60 ThinQ, Wing 5G

Other: Moto Z4, Razer 2, OnePlus 6T, OnePlus 7 Pro, OnePlus 7 Pro 5G, OnePlus 7T, OnePlus 7T Pro 5G McLaren, Nord10, Asus Rog Phone2, Moto Edge+, Moto Z4, Moto G Stylus 5G, OnePlus 8 5G, OnePlus 8 Pro, OnePlus 8T, OnePlus 8T+, moto razr 5G, ZTE Red Magic 3, Microsoft Surface Duo, OnePlus 9 5G, OnePlus 9 Pro 5G

Eligible Trade-in Smartphones for $350 Apple iPhone 13 series (Using code TRADEOFFER22):

Must meet AT&T Trade-in Program requirements and have a trade-in value of $35-94.99 after device condition assessment has been completed.

Eligible devices:

Apple: iPhone 7, 7 Plus, SE (2nd Gen), SE (3rdGen), iPhone 8, 8+, X, XR, XS, XS Max, 11, 11 Pro, 11 Pro Max, 12, 12 mini, 12 Pro, 12 Pro Max, 13, 13 mini, 13 Pro, 13 Pro Max

Samsung: A50, A50s, A51, A70, S, S 4G, S Aviator, SL, S Blaze, S Duos, S Duos 2, S Glide, SII, SII HD, SII LTE SII Plus, SII Skyrocket, SII X, SIII, SIII Mini, SIII Mini VE, S Lightray 4G, S Plus, S Relay, S Showcase, S Vibrant, S3 Neo, S4, S4 Active, S4 BE, S4 Duos, S4 Mini, S4 Triband, S4 X, S4 Zoom, S5, S5 Mini, S5 Sport, S5 Active, S6, S6 Active, Edge+ Duos, S6 Edge, S6 Edge TD, S6 Edge+, S7, S7 Active, S7 Edge, S8, S8+, S8 Active, S8 Duos S9, S9+, S9+ Duos, Note, Note II, Note3, Note3 Neo, Note4, Note4 Duos, Note4 S, Note Edge, Note5, Note5 Duos, Note7, Note8, Note9, A71, A71 5G, S10, S10+, S10 5G, S10e, S10 Lite, Note10, Fold, Fold 5G, S20 5G, S20 Ultra 5G, S20+, S22, S22+, S22 Ultra, Note10+, Note10+ 5G, Note20, Note20 Ultra 5G, Z Flip, S20 FE, S20 FE 5G, S21 5G, S21+ 5G, S21 Ultra 5G, ZFold2 5G, Z Flip3 5G, Z Fold3 5G

Google: Pixel 3, 3 XL, 3a, 3a XL, 4, Pixel 4 XL, Pixel 4a, Pixel 5, Pixel 5a, Pixel 6, Pixel 6 Pro

LG: Stylo 6, V50 ThinQ, V60 ThinQ, Wing 5G

Other: Moto Z4, Moto G Stylus 5G, Razer 2, OnePlus 6T, OnePlus 7 Pro, OnePlus 7 Pro 5G, OnePlus 7T, OnePlus 7T Pro 5G McLaren, Nord10, Asus Rog Phone2, OnePlus 8 5G, OnePlus 8 Pro, moto razr 5G, ZTE Red Magic 3, Microsoft Surface Duo

Eligible Trade-in devices for $300 Apple iPad Air (2020) (Using code 300TRADE):

Must meet AT&T Trade-in Program requirements and have a trade-in value of $20+ after device condition assessment has been completed.

Smartphones listed for the $800/$350 offer are eligible along with additional smartphones, tablets, and watches.

Discover your device value at https://tradein.att.com/start-trade/find/devices

Additional Terms:

See att.com/unlimited for current unlimited plans. Retired unlimited plans may also qualify (excluding prepaid, session-based, and Data Unlimited at $45/mo. plans). Speed, usage & other restrictions apply.

Trade-in smartphones must meet AT&T Trade-In Program requirements and meet the minimum trade-in value requirements when AT&T takes possession of the trade-in device.

Must complete trade-in within 30 days from activation of the new phone.

If the trade-in value of the device is greater than the credit you are eligible for under this offer, you may receive a one-time trade-in credit (value via instant credit or promo card) in lieu of this bill credit offer.

To qualify for bill credits, the wireless line must be on an installment agreement, and remain active & in good standing for 30 days.

The installment agreement starts when the device is shipped.

To get all the credits, the discounted device must remain on the installment agreement and you must keep eligible service for the entire installment term.

If you upgrade or pay up/off the installment agreement on the discounted device early, your credits may cease.

You have 14 days to exchange or return the smartphone; a restocking fee of up to $55 may apply.

Pricing, promotions, programming, terms & restrictions are subject to change & may be modified or terminated at any time without notice.

The Amazing Google Voice now on iPhone


The "holy grail" of mobile unified communications has finally arrived on the iPhone. It's a solution that ties my email (Gmail), instant messenger (Google Talk), Video Chat, Free SMS, Voicemail (Google Voice), Google Calendar, Google Docs all together into one organized and simple hosted solution. Google Voice VoIP can also fix your coverage by making phone calls on WiFi



Cheapest Unlimited Data Plans

Average Cell Phone Voice Minutes Used by Age
The smartphone data usage trend and the decline in cellular voice minute usage are concerning to the telecom industry.  In theory, you really don't really need to buy talk time minutes if you have a data plan or only use WiFi for making VoIP calls.  Carriers are constantly pushing their fast new 4G LTE networks but in reality, they compete with Free WiFi.  So as a consumer you should be smart about what you buy.  Here is a list of data plans in order of pricing. The trick is buying a phone on the provider network or having an unlocked phone that works on any of these networks.

Virgin Mobile - No Contract plan for $25 per month which includes unlimited data, text, and 300 calling minutes on 3G.

Tracfone / Net10 - No Contract $45 per month with unlimited data, text, and talk on 3G.

MetroPCS - No Contract for $40 per month with unlimited talk, and text. Some data roaming charges may apply as the network is limited in size but they do have an LTE network that is fast.

Boost Mobile  - No Contract: for $40 per month with unlimited talk, text, data, no roaming charges. 3G is available with some phones.

T-Mobile (Best Value!)- No Contract for $40 per month which includes unlimited data on 3G and 4G HSPA+ Blackberry phones will cost you $50 per month for unlimited data.  If you are an older customer hopefully you have been grandfathered into their old plan which costs $25 per month.  

Sprint - Requires a 2-year contract for $69.99 per month which includes unlimited data, text, and calling.

AT&T data plan - plans range in price from $15 for a 200 MB data plan and $25 per month for 2 MB. If are conscious about downloading video on WiFi their pricing plans might work for you. Caution because just like texting they have crazy data charges of $10 per 1 GB of data if you go over and the data is not reusable on monthly basis.  AT&T is also rolling out a 4G HSPA+ network.

Verizon Wireless - Requires customers to buy a mobile package that is more than $30 per month and you’re limited to 5GB per month.  They do have an LTE network coming out in 2011 but this will require you to purchase an LTE compatible phone.

T-Mobile + MetroPCS Is Good For Consumers


A MetroPCS (NYSE: PCS) and T-Mobile USA owned by Deutsche Telekom (NYSE: DTEGY) merger makes a lot of sense for the following reasons.  Here are 10 reasons this would be good for consumers.  
  1. Keep the integrity of a discount carrier intact.  
  2. MetroPCS has LTE spectrum that T-Mobile USA could use.
  3. More purchasing scale 43M customers (MetroPCS 9M + T-Mobile 34M)
  4. T-Mobile & MetroPCS have dead zone coverage gaps both can fill.
  5. Consumer friendly unlimited data plans would likely continue at both companies. 
  6. Fewer competing customers on a network = less data congestion.
  7. Consumers might have the option of using a GSM or CDMA 3G phones.
  8. T-Mobile HSPA+ 4G is very fast and the network is not congested.
  9. MetroPCS 4G LTE is very fast and the network is not congested.
  10. MetroPCS has been very aggressive using femtocell and DAS to improve coverage.
Deutsche Telekom is considering a stock swap transaction. However, I would support raising more capital in a T-Mobile USA IPO after the acquisition. MetroPCS shares jumped almost 30% instantly on the deal and currently has a market capitalization of around $3 billion.  MetroPCS seems to have plenty of cash in the bank of $2B and has annual revenue of approximately $5B.  So the combination would appear to be a strategy combining entities to have more scale for handset purchasing and spectrum allocation.  Considering the closest competitor is AT&T and Verizon who each have 90 to 100M+ subscribers.

MetroPCS has began deploying their LTE network before Verizon. MetroPCS is currently built around a CDMA 3G voice network and would be incompatible with T-Mobile’s GSM/HSPA network. However, in the future T-Mobile could use MetroPCS's LTE channels.  Reuters reported in an article "MetroPCS and T-Mobile are not a good technological or customer fit, one analyst said".   MetroPCS is a CDMA carrier in 3G and T-Mobile is a GSM carrier.  However, LTE is LTE and new handsets should be cross carrier compatible if the industry does the consumers right.

A combination of Leap Wireless 7M subscribers also makes sense in the future but right now LTE spectrum is more important to T-Mobile I would bet.

Related Articles:
Where is MetroPCS Expanding Coverage?

Free 3G on Kindle & Nook Ebook Readers

No AT&T Monthly Data Plans Required
Its actually worthing paying a little extra for the Kindle 3G or Nook 3G when the Kindle WiFi & Nook WiFi are priced about $50 less than the 3G. The Kindle & Nook 3G (Free 3G + Wi-Fi) is the easiest option because there is no wireless monthly data plan fee from AT&T to use their 3G network.  Each ebook reader has a built-in free 3G connectivity which uses the same cell phone towers & there are no monthly fees or commitments. Amazon & Barnes & Noble subsidizes AT&T's 3G service while you are traveling and you can also use your WiFi at home and don't have a 3G signal. 3G enables you to download books anytime without having to find a Wi-Fi hotspot connection. With wireless coverage in over 100 countries and territories, Kindle 3G is a great option for travelers.

List of T-Mobile Phones That Have UMA WiFi Calling


Right now T-Mobile is the only US carrier to offer UMA WiFi calling on Android phones.  Here is a list of phones that currently support the Kineto application that is not currently available in the Android marketplace.  The application is free but minutes are deducted from your total plan if you make calls over WiFi which is reasonable.  Other carriers like AT&T, Verizon & Sprint have largely ignored this demand from consumers because of their growing femtocell businesses where they would like to sell you a piece of hardware for around $250 plus a monthly data plan. See: AT&T Microcell, Verizon femtocell & Sprint femtocell sales.

Kineto Wireless is an innovator and leading supplier of solutions that enable delivery of mobile services over broadband. They have deploy Smart Wi-Fi Application for Wi-Fi Calling to their customers for free improve indoor coverage through the use of existing Wi-Fi access points. This list is constantly being updated so please check back for further updates and and become a Facebook fan to stay informed.

After speaking with T-Mobile's customer service team we came up with a list of phones that currently have UMA on the device:  G2, MyTouch Phones, Samsung Vibrant, Behold 2 Katalyst, Most Blackberry Phones, Nokia e73 and Nokia 6086, Motorola Cliq and Cliq XT

T-Mobile WiFi Calling Works Great

 

So far I have used the T-Mobile WiFi calling feature a number of times inside homes and buildings and it works great on the G2. It appears that once you are registered on the network it minimizes the signal from HSPA+ or 3G to reduce interference.  I am also able to send text messages as well over WiFi.  So far I have not dropped a call and the connection is very clear.  Once again congratulations to Kineto Wireless for making this happen.  You will not likely see other US carriers following their lead because it is not a profit center for them and disrupts the growing femtocell business.

I still have two remaining business questions: Why is T-Mobile Wifi Not Free especially when you are overseas and will you be charged international calling rates if the call originates on a WiFi network in Europe for example?

Free Gogo Inflight Wifi from Google Chrome


Kudos to Google and Gogo this holiday season! Google Chrome (the browser team) has partnered with AirTran Airways, Delta, and Virgin America to offer free Gogo Inflight Wi-Fi on every domestic flight from November 20, 2010 through January 2, 2011. These participating airlines have outfitted their entire domestic fleet with Gogo Inflight Wi-Fi, and we expect more connected passengers this holiday season than ever before! Just bring a Wi-Fi enabled laptop or smartphone and stay onboard.

Google is also promoting its Chrome browser in anticipation of this become a very powerful mobile platform that will help solve many of the rendering problems web surfers have when going to a website that is not WAP enabled. Many think this could be very disruptive to the iPhone app and Android application development business. In theory, this will allow you to go to any web page from your mobile phone using Chrome.

Free Google Voice + Video + IM + Gmail = Awesome

Free Google Voice + Video + IM + Gmail = Awesome

The "holy grail" of unified communications has arrived . . . a solution that ties my email (Gmail), instant messenger (Google Talk),  Video Chat, Free SMS, Voicemail (Google Voice),  Google Calendar, and Google Docs all together into one organized and simple hosted solution.  You can't beat the price which is currently free and it just might fix your cell phone coverage as well.   What finally blew me away was the last step of choosing my new phone number and you can search by keywords, numbers, and zip code.  I typed in my mobile phone number and my new number was only one digit in the area code different.  I now have a (310) and a (317) phone numbers and that is cool!

As a small business owner, this is an ideal solution and could save you thousands of dollars per year if you take the time and get organized.  It's also a solution for the many millions of office and home cell phone users who don't have any mobile phone reception in their homes or office.  It is now so simple to simply dial the number with one click that you can leave your cell phone in the car (if you forward your phone number).  No more dead zones or dropped calls that seem to be getting worse on smartphones that consume more data.  

This is a timely announcement by Google as VoIP competitor Skype now has over 500M+ users and is positioning itself for an IPO.  I think Google Voice will now quickly catapult itself as a big competitor to Skype. The recent announcement of Google calls from PC to Phone is somewhat unique as Skype currently charges for these calls with their Skype Out product.  It is cheap as well but I assume Google Advertising has thought through the math and figure that they can make it free and make more money on the advertising served up.   SMART!

It will also be very interesting to see how tightly integrated the new Google Voice features are with the Android operating system and the New Features on the T-Mobile G2 Phone phone that will be coming out in November.  
Click to Dial from your Contacts or Instant Messanger
Google Voice Transcription on PC or MAC

Google Voice on iPhone and Android
Related Posts:

How to Get a Free Sprint 3G Femtocell

Sprint Airave 3G EV-DO Femtocell

Sprint will apparently begin offering FREE femtocells for its "qualified customers" that have reception problems on their 3G / EV-DO phones. Sprint's new Airave femtocell now supports 3G which technically should be 3X faster (500-700 kbps kilobytes per second ) than their 2G Samsung femtocell of 150 (kbps).  The updated Airave Access Point (aka what is a femtocell?) uses a customer's broadband internet connection to route calls back to the Sprint network and is being marketed by Sprint as a mini cell tower. It covers up to 5,000 square feet and supports up to six calls simultaneously.  The Airave will be available in stores to customers with specific in-building reception issues.

Sprint 2G Airave femtocell has been around for almost 3 years since 2007 and sells for $100.  For some reason that makes no business sense, Sprint will still continue to offering its' 2G data version of Airave for $99.99, plus a required $4.99/month plus an activation fee of $10 for a single line or $20 multi-line plans.  We don't have a clue why they would continue charging for a old product other than possibly trying to avoid cannibalizing their existing customers.

Sprint is riding the data wave that AT&T creating launched their AT&T femtocell earlier this year.  Sprint seems to be doing it right and offering the device for free which is how it should be.  We are not quite sure what criteria will get you the "qualified customer" status yet but here are some ideas below that might help get you a free femtocell:
  1. Find out if the Sprint 3G femtocell is available in your market.
  2. Use Sprint Dead Zones Map map to share reception problems in your neighborhood (see map below)
  3. Complain a lot to Sprint customer service that your home reception is poor
  4. Document your dropped calls on a daily basis using your monthly bill
  5. Show Sprint that you have been a customer for many years
  6. Show Sprint that you have multiple Sprint phones in the house
  7. Show Sprint that you have multiple subscribers in the house
  8. Show Sprint that you are a Clearwire customer
  9. Become friendly with your local Sprint store sales manager
  10. Find out when your contract expires and use renewal as leverage
If you know of any other factors that could help influence Sprint to give you a free femtocell please submit in the comments below or email us. See our map below to build your case to the carrier and use the map to show problems in your area.


How to Get a Free AT&T 3G MicroCell

AT&T's "most valuable customers" are now receiving free MicroCells or mini-cell phone towers to boost their home or office cell phone signals.  

Free Mobile TV Available Worldwide Except US

Mobile TV is Common Everywhere Except the United States and Europe

Isn't it embarrassing that free, on-the-go Mobile TV viewing is common just about everywhere except the United States and Europe?  US operator resistance and a maze of conflicting technical standards and program licensing hurdles have kept the technology out of the global mainstream. Why the lack of independence of content distribution and handset contracts has not caused a consumer revolt yet in the US still has me dumbfounded.   Because we are still being bamboozled by government bureaucrats and corporate executive thieves while the FCC turns their head the other way.

When South Korea the World Cup in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, life will not necessarily grind to a halt back in Seoul.   Many fans will instead follow a live broadcast of the match on their mobile phones. In South Korea, free-to-air mobile TV is a five-year-old fact of life. According to the country’s broadcasters, 27 million people — 56 percent of the population — watch regularly.

While South Koreans are the world leaders in mobile TV viewing, the technology is also catching on in China, southeast Asia, India, Africa and Latin America, where 80 million people now have cellphones that can receive free, live TV broadcasts.  At least 40 million people are watching live TV this year on mobile phones, and most live in emerging markets where operators, which prefer to sell TV programming for a fee through their wireless networks, do not control the sale of handsets.

In the complex world of wireless communication, free-to-air mobile TV technology is relatively simple. With a tiny receiver chip and telescoping antenna, a mobile phone can receive free digital or analog programming like any other television.

In South Korea, 25 million people watch free digital terrestrial broadcasts on mobile handsets and two million pay to subscribe to satellite programming, according to Korean broadcasters. The typical screen made by Samsung is a three-inch, or 7.6-centimeter, diagonal. Batteries support three to six hours of viewing. In Korea, free mobile TV broadcasts are interspersed with ads.

Where are you Google TV?

Telegent is shipping about 750,000 chips each month to handset makers, most designed for viewing analog broadcasts in markets like Brazil, Peru, Argentina, Russia, Nigeria, Thailand, Egypt and China. Brazil is one of Telegent’s biggest markets.

But with the level of data traffic surging on wireless networks around the world, some operators are beginning to look to free-to-air mobile TV — which operates independently and adds no additional traffic burden on an operator’s network — as a way to retain customers.

In April, 12 broadcasters and television content owners in the United States, including Fox, NBC, Gannett Broadcasting, Hearst and Cox Media, formed a joint venture to pool their broadcasting spectrum and eventually deliver mobile TV to 150 million people. The U.S. effort is in its initial stages, and no deadlines have been set for adoption.

Samsung, which includes mobile TV chips as standard technology in its high-end smartphones in South Korea, is making a handset for Sprint that works on the U.S. mobile broadcast standard, ATSC-M/H. Samsung also makes a DVB-H phone for Europe, two that work on Latin America’s ISDB-T standard and an analog handset for Southeast Asia.

On May 24, Sprint and nine broadcasters in the Washington-Baltimore area began a four-month trial that will broadcast programming to mobile phones, netbook computers and portable DVD players made by Samsung, LG Electronics and Dell.

Dave Lougee, the president of Gannett Broadcasting, said the organizers of the trial, a group of 900 U.S. television stations called the Open Mobile Video Coalition, were hopeful consumers would take to the technology.

The trial is being supported by every facet of the U.S. television industry, including content owners, broadcasters, broadcast equipment makers and advertisers, represented by the Television Bureau of Advertisers and The Ad Council.  Read more

Related Story:
Comcast Dismisses Google TV As Competitor

Softbank Japan Offers Free Femtocells

Should AT&T should follow the lead of SoftBank in Japan, who announced this month they would provide free femtocells and dedicated ADSL broadband lines to anyone with poor coverage?  AT&T claims to have 98% population coverage - 1% behind their competitors - so this allows them to resolve dead spots quickly where their customers have problems. Although also rolling out more outdoor cell towers, femtocells can be deployed much more quickly when hosted in their customer's premises.

AT&T announced it is rolling out 3G Microcells nationwide but many readers have been turned away indefinitely. Maybe the rollout isn't going to go as fast as promised. With AT&T continuing to draw heat about their network coverage which like many other networks have been straining under the demands of iPhone and heavy data usage, they'll want to ensure the solution works with few teething troubles before ramping up the volumes too quickly.

See related article from Ubiquisys founder Will Franks

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