1) Terrible name, really awful. Fi? I guess if it's "project" maybe this wasn't public-brand ready?
2) Why wouldn't someone choose the t-mobile unlimited plan vs this one?
3) For the refund policy, why wouldn't everyone sign up for the lowest plan? The presentation is confusing, just say 1gb min and $10 for each gig after that.
> Why wouldn't someone choose the t-mobile unlimited plan vs this one?
The "compelling" feature is the support for multiple carriers (T-Mobile and Sprint) without having to do some zany dual-SIM setup or somesuch.
To me, though, that's barely any consolation for the lack of an unlimited plan, which is a deal-breaker, and which is why - no matter how "good" Verizon and AT&T (for example) advertise themselves to be - I'll never switch back to them until they provide an unlimited data plan. T-Mobile's unlimited plan (and even its non-unlimited plans) are a way better deal, since you're never charged overages (unlike with Sprint's non-unlimited plans, all of AT&T and Verizon's plans, and - now - Google Fi).
Agreed. Most of my usage is in cities where both Sprint and T-mobile have great coverage. Lack of unlimited is a deal-breaker (or at least higher data tiers)
1) Terrible name, really awful. Fi? I guess if it's "project" maybe this wasn't public-brand ready?
2) Why wouldn't someone choose the t-mobile unlimited plan vs this one?
3) For the refund policy, why wouldn't everyone sign up for the lowest plan? The presentation is confusing, just say 1gb min and $10 for each gig after that.