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I'm wondering if they are planing on merging the companies, or keeping them separate.
It's possible Sprint could buy T-Mobile and then leave the T-Mobile brand as is - similar to how MetroPCS remained after being bought by T-Mobile.
I thought that Metro will eventually fade out by the summer of next year. I personally hope the merge, buy out, goes through. I think it will help the customers of both companies. Both networks need big improvements in many places. Both combined still will not be as big as AT&T or Verizon. The main problem I see of course is CDMA vs GSM. But eventually LTE will take of that problem. It could work I think, but it might take a while. But I think Sprint/SoftBank would do better going after U.S. Cellular right now.
As long as they keep the T-Mobile plans.
It's just not the Phandroid article but quite a few media outlets as well. In fact, Sascha Sagan over at PC Mag went ballistic over the rumor and has pointed out numerous reasons why the deal should never happen. he lists mostly all cons and no pros on why its not a good idea. The cherry on the cake was when he said that having 3 top carriers wouldn't work here because Canada has 3 and its not working there. I personally think whatever happens in Canada is Canada, just because a system may or may not work in another country does not mean it will duplicate here in the USA. Whether good or bad. Still, one cannot dismiss what all these folks are saying until you debug each con.I'm still trying to figure out why there are a lot of people, on the Phandroid article, that don't want the merger to happen. While Sprint doesn't have the greatest reputation, as far as coverage is concerned, it would just seem that having the combined networks would help both sides.
For me personally, Sprint coverage at my house far exceeds any of the 4 carriers. T-mobile seems better in open areas in L.A. And data speeds for T-mobile's 3G has been much faster than Sprint's.
Ultimately, I've never minded the slower data speeds, as long as it works fast enough for me to kill time (while out and about). Of course, anything that will increase the coverage and speed, I'm never against.
As long as they keep the T-Mobile plans.
Actually I find that Sprint plans are a bit better and contrary to what folks think, Sprint actually came out with numerous plan changes from Premier a few years ago to yearly upgrades just recently that were actually pre-dating T-Mobiles plans. But for whatever reason, Sprint didn't advertise them as much and some were stopped. Then comes the T-Mobiles Uncarrier onslaught and everyone thinks they are the ones that started it all. Sort of reminds me of Hyundai with their 10 year/100000 mile warranty. They came out with it first and folks laughed, but then others copied it and marketed a bit better and folks think the other ones were the one that conceived of it.I am up in the air on the plans. I have been to the T-Mobile store a few times to talk to them about their plans. I would be ok with them, but I like my Everything Data Family Plan I have with Sprint. I think I would save about $10 to $20 with T-Mobile. I would definitely get better data speeds right now with T-Mobile until Sprint finishes their LTE setup here. I like to travel, I find that Sprint has LTE in places where other carriers do not have service, or little service. I can see why Sprint started out in the little places first. So I am playing the waiting game. But I am getting a little tired of waiting. So anything that will improve Sprint's network I'm down for.
My personal take...I'm still trying to figure out why there are a lot of people, on the Phandroid article, that don't want the merger to happen. While Sprint doesn't have the greatest reputation, as far as coverage is concerned, it would just seem that having the combined networks would help both sides.
For me personally, Sprint coverage at my house far exceeds any of the 4 carriers. T-mobile seems better in open areas in L.A. And data speeds for T-mobile's 3G has been much faster than Sprint's.
Ultimately, I've never minded the slower data speeds, as long as it works fast enough for me to kill time (while out and about). Of course, anything that will increase the coverage and speed, I'm never against.
My personal take...
I'm against it for the sake of preserving everything T-Mobile is doing for the mobile market. They're driving the changes being made for more consumer friendly practices. Theyre small enough to need to do revolutionary things to gain market share and force the large carriers to respond.
What incentive do they have to keep pressuring the big 3 (helping consumers) when they're owned by one of them? From Sprints standpoint, what better way to limit damage than to buy them and have a preview on what is going to happen and have the final say on whats being done? Leaving T-mobile as its current seperate brand owned by sprint allows them to do just that.
I'd rather have an unchecked T-mobile able to make the moves it wants to.
Especially the comments which are more enlightening.I thought this was a good read on the subject.
Yahoo!
A T-Mobile-Sprint merger is the last thing we need right now
The thing that concerns people about a SoftBank(Sprint)/T-mobile merger is that so many of the cell phone companies that operate in the U.S. are already owned by foreign corporations. For example: SoftBank is a Japanese corporation, and it owns 80% of Sprint. Here's a list of Sprint's wholly owned subsidiaries:Assurance Wireless, Helio, Virgin Mobile USA; in addition, Sprint is the parent company of Boost Mobile.
Verizon Wireless: 55% American owned; 45% British owned, although Verizon Communications (American owned and dba Verizon Wireless) has agreed to by Vodafone's 45% stake in Verizon Communications.
Tracfone: depending on the stats you're looking at, either 55% is owned by Telefonos de Mexico, or 98.2% is owned by America Movil, both being Mexican corporations. Tracfone's service brands are: Tracfone, Net10 Wireless, SafeLink Wireless, Straight Talk,SIMPLE Mobile, and Telcel America.
MetroPCS - operated by T-Mobile; May 1, 2013, MetroPCS officially merged with T-mobile.
Basically, that leaves AT&T in Dallas, Credo in San Francisco, and Verizon in New Jersey as the only good-sized American owned phone companies. If SoftBank purchased T-Mobile, then a Japanese company would own all of T-Mobile and most of Sprint, Assurance Wireless, Helio, Virgin Mobile USA, and Boost Mobile, (not to mention Clearwire that it just recently purchased).
Not sure that the FCC wants one foreign company to control that much of the US cell phone industry. This isn't necessarily my opinion, it's just what I've heard people talking about, and I didn't see that anyone had mentioned this perspective, so I wanted to put it out there.
One thing i thought of was in turn from sprint buying T-Mobile, they will own Metro which has a CDMA network which could be expansion for sprint?