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  • T-Mobile is giving everyone a free cell tower
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    Update time: 2015-11-05
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    T-Mobile wants to obliterate any notion that its coverage is inferior to the competition.

    The cellphone carrier announced Monday that all T-Mobile customers with a "Simple Choice" plan can now receive a free mini cell tower for their home. The 8.5-inch square gadget blasts out T-Mobile's 4G-LTE network to a 3,000-square-foot radius.

    T-Mobile has done this kind of thing before. It previously gave out free Wi-Fi routers that allowed customers to make calls and texts over their home Wi-Fi networks.

    What T-Mobile announced Monday is different: The mini tower (T-Mobile is calling it a CellSpot), lets customers connect to T-Mobile's cellular network -- not Wi-Fi. That means in places where they received one or no "bars" of service, they'll now get a full, speedy connection.

    Other carriers have similar offerings, but they cost hundreds of dollars. T-Mobile is giving them away for free (OK, for a $25 refundable deposit).

    "The big difference between us and the carriers is that they'll do absolutely everything they can to bleed you dry," said John Legere, T-Mobile's CEO, in a statement.   

    "We'll do absolutely everything we can and use every proven technology available to give you the best coverage possible."

    T-Mobile (TMUS) says that 50% of cellphone customers -- of any network -- complain that they drop calls at home. Basements, garages and pre-war apartment buildings all suffer from lousy cell signals. So there's an obvious need to address the indoor coverage gap.

    The CellSpot, manufactured by Alcatel-Lucent, hooks up to your home router. Using your Internet connection as backhaul, it broadcasts T-Mobile's 3G, 4G and 4G-voice networks to up to 16 connected devices. That's a first -- some other carriers offer just 3G, and most connect just four phones.

    Legere called the CellSpot "a huge feat of engineering."

    The company said that it has handed out a million of its old Wi-Fi CellSpots, which it considers to be very strong adoption (it has more than 50 million customers).

    Giving the CellSpots out for free instead of charging a couple hundred bucks is a way for the company to keep customers and add new ones.

    http://money.cnn.com/2015/11/02/technology/tmobile-cell-tower/index.html

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