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T-Mobile No Longer Offering 'Free Data For Life' Offer For New Tablets (tmonews.com) 40

T-Mobile has quietly killed off its "free data for life" offer for new tablets. In a statement provided to TmoNews, T-Mobile said: "When we launched Free Data For Life in 2013, 200MB of high-speed data was a lot. Today, customers want unlimited and we're all in with T-Mobile ONE. Customers who have T-Mobile ONE can add unlimited LTE data on a tablet for just $20 a month with autopay. Nothing changes for current customers with Free Data For Life on a tablet. They can keep it as long as they like." From the report: T-Mobile has updated its Free Data for Life support page to say that the program is no longer available for new activations as of May 7, 2017. The Free Data for Life program was attractive because it let you get a bit of cellular data on your tablet every month, even if you weren't a T-Mobile customer. This was nice for people that were ultra-light tablet data users, and it gave customers of other carriers a taste of T-Mo. The good news is that at least anyone that signed up before May 7 can still get their free data every 30 days, so long as they own their tablet.

You can compare cell phone plans including T-Mobile plans at Wirefly.


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T-Mobile No Longer Offering 'Free Data For Life' Offer For New Tablets

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  • by sims 2 ( 994794 ) on Monday May 08, 2017 @08:16PM (#54381645)

    I still quite like it.
    On the older ipads (like the ipad 4 i'm using now) you can only pick up t-mobile's EDGE service so 200MB is effectively unlimited.

    On the newer ipad's (like an ipad air 2 I had the chance to play with) you can burn through the whole 200MB in about 40 seconds if your not careful.

  • Worth getting if only so Find My iGadget worked. Definitely a killer app for this service.

    I just hope it goes back to working on my iPad when the data pass I bought for a period of heavy use expires.

    It would be amazing if I could keep migrating to ever-newer devices by moving the Apple SIM from device to device...
  • T-Mobile's only real selling point is being different from - better than - Verizon. If they start walking back what they offer, what's to stop them from doing it in other areas? Why switch?
    • Re:Goodbye Trust (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gweilo8888 ( 921799 ) on Monday May 08, 2017 @08:37PM (#54381767)
      They're not walking back from what they offered. They never promised to offer this plan to new customers forever, and existing customers' plans continue to be honored. Where's your problem?
      • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

        To my knowledge, they've never walked back from offers.

        I've been a customer for over ten years now, and for the majority of the time, I've been on plans not offered at the time.

  • by Jhon ( 241832 ) on Monday May 08, 2017 @09:36PM (#54382013) Homepage Journal

    For about $0.99 plus shipping you can get a freedompop unlimited SIM. Their customer service sucks but it's effectively 200 MBs every month for free (just remember to cancel all "promotional" services before the first month ends. You can also hit the forums and exchange email addresses with other freedompop customers to become "Freedompop Friends". Each "friend" basically gets you another 50 MB per month up to an additional 500 MB for a total of 700 MB.

    I have one in my iPad mini and it works great.

    FP wont be around as long as ATT -- but I've used their services for a few years now and expect them to be around at least a few more before they go belly up or sell their customers. So, for a buck and a bit more I get 700 MBs data. And I can move the sim to any other device I want whenever I want.

    • by tricorn ( 199664 )

      Freedompop has service through either Sprint or AT&T networks, depending on your device. You get 200MB/month on AT&T or 500MB on Sprint.

      You really need to pay close attention to what you'really signed up for and check your billing regularly, but they do refund without much fuss when they screw up, once you figure out how to open a ticket.

      They make money by up-selling hard with dire warnings of what you're losing or risking by downgrading, and they have a weird auto-charge auto-top policy you need t

      • by Jhon ( 241832 )

        They also have service through a UK/EU provider on their Global SIM product. Latancy in the US not great (like 400-500) but it's pretty stable. I was driving through Sequoia National Forrest my Global SIM phone (unlocked Iphone 5c) was the last to loose connectivity and the first to get it back. It beat verizon and ATT (other phones with our group).

  • "When we launched Free Data For Life in 2013, 200MB of high-speed data was a lot." No, it wasn't. 200MB/month was a lot in 2003, not 2013.
    • I'm surprised there aren't more comments in here about that line. Who the fuck thinks 200MB is a lot in the age of smartphones and tablets? I can burn that in a few hours of youtube videos.

      • Yeah, but IMHO it wasn't "intended" to be for a lot of usage. It was to give you "the first one for free" to hopefully make you want to pay for a higher limit plan.

        I use it just to have podcasts keep downloading, e.g. even when it's in my car (before I go to the gym).. I still end up using the full 200 MB before the end of the month, but the "freebie" was still worth it for me to pay for the cell hardware in the first place.

        (I had thought they might creep up the free amount as years go by, but wasn't expect

  • " Nothing changes for current customers with Free Data For Life on a tablet. They can keep it as long as they like."

    There's a typo in there, it should read 'as long as they liVe.'

  • Free used to mean free. Not partially free. Not somewhat free. Not free with pending charges. Sheesh!
  • Tabby what? I'm fine with my phone..

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