Sprint Boost Customers Will Be Rewarded Every Six Months With Cheaper Bills [Sprint]

Good news for Sprint Boost Mobile customers—every six months, the network will reduce the monthly price of the contract by $5.

Good news for Sprint Boost Mobile customers—every six months, the network will reduce the monthly price of the contract by $5. That means anyone on a $50 contract could end up paying just $35 a month after 18 months. [Bloomberg] More »


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Sprint Boost Customers Will Be Rewarded Every Six Months With Cheaper Bills [Sprint]

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Verizon Will Introduce Tiered Data Pricing in Next 4 to 6 Months, Says VCast App Store is about ‘Choice’

Posted on 23rd September 2010 by admin in , Google, android, bing, car, feature, moto, motorola, phone, samsung, us, verizon, vzw | Tags: , , , , , , ,

We have heard talk for a while of Verizon moving to a tiered pricing plan for data on their network along with the launch of their 4G LTE service, and it seems plans are moving ahead. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the new pricing structure could be in place in four to six months. It is unclear whether tiered pricing will apply only to 4G, which is also set to launch in the same timeframe, or if it will be slapped across the board for 3G as well

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We have heard talk for a while of Verizon moving to a tiered pricing plan for data on their network along with the launch of their 4G LTE service, and it seems plans are moving ahead. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the new pricing structure could be in place in four to six months. It is unclear whether tiered pricing will apply only to 4G, which is also set to launch in the same timeframe, or if it will be slapped across the board for 3G as well.

There is no talk of exact pricing, but Verizon Chief Executive Ivan Seidenberg made sure to voice his disagreement with the valuation of data in competitor AT&T’s similar pricing scheme. That leaves some hope for reasonably priced (or as reasonable as VZW pricing could be) data packages to meet the demand of users no matter how much data they chew up month to month. We’re sure to be hearing a lot more about the new pricing over the next few months.

And just like tiered pricing offers users a “choice” when it comes to paying for only the data they use, Verizon is defending the announcement of their own V CAST Apps store for Android phones on the same basis. While many have viewed it as a blatant attempt to one-up Google at their own game, Verizon is taking a different stance. “V CAST Apps is NOT out to take over the phone. It’s about choice, and about simplicy [sic] – carrier-billing — and quality — great apps,” they tweeted in response to questioning at the Verizon Developer Community Conference.

But is it really about choice? Or rather, is there anything wrong with Verizon’s app store? Samsung features media and app stores on their Galaxy S devices in addition to the Android Market. Many carriers without access to the Market or paid apps in the Market have instated their own avenues of pedaling priced apps. Yes, the V CAST Apps store may take a step back from the progressive changes Verizon seemed to make when they launched their first Android device, the Motorola Droid, but it isn’t all gloom and doom for the future.

The point is Android and Google allow for things like third-party app stores and proprietary apps. Yes, it often leads to annoying bloatware or something along the lines of the whole Verizon/Bing/Fascinate fiasco, but it’s part of the reason why carriers and manufacturers are so keen to adopt Android. They can do with it almost anything they want and then turn a huge profit off of the whole deal. It’s the price we have to pay to play in an open source environment. That’s my two-cents, anyway. What about yours?

[via BGR, TechCrunch]

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Verizon Will Introduce Tiered Data Pricing in Next 4 to 6 Months, Says VCast App Store is about ‘Choice’

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Greenpeace Skewers Zuckerberg’s "So Coal" Network In Adorably Insulting Video [Facebook]

Posted on 16th September 2010 by admin in , electricity, green, hd, pixel, video | Tags: , , , , , , ,

The edgy ecophiles at Greenpeace have placed Facebook in their crosshairs, bashing Mark Zuckerberg over what they allege is a reliance on coal to fuel his (substantial) data centers. A new video slams Zuck, and asks for a renewable alternative. More »

If you’re trying to raise awareness for a cause—especially if that cause is providing toilets for the 2.6 billion people in the world who don’t have one—there are worse places to start than piloting an RC-turd. I think. More »


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Nothing Says "Good Cause" Like Remote Controlled Poop [Poop]

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How To Invite Your Entire Apartment Building To Your Party [WiFi]

Turns out, it’s really easy to get your entire building to come to your party. Just rename your Wi-Fi network to PARTY SATURDAY NIGHT APT #434 and watch all the tech-savvy folks roll in. [ Reddit via BuzzFeed ] More »