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EE delays sim only 4G launch by 2 weeks.
Thine Wonk
Posts: 17,190
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It seems EE has had teething troubles with 4G. Presumably due to the initial launch issues they've delayed launching the sim only for two weeks (it was meant to be today)
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http://techcrunch.com/2012/11/09/u-k-s-first-4g-network-ee-delays-sim-only-tariff-launch-for-up-to-two-weeks/
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http://techcrunch.com/2012/11/09/u-k-s-first-4g-network-ee-delays-sim-only-tariff-launch-for-up-to-two-weeks/
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well £21.00 for the cheapest EE 4G...no thanks.
Im getting download speeds of over 8mb on Three for £6.90 month.
I'm not quite sure either, I'd happily pay £21 on sim only when 3 bring their LTE out next year.
And there is no information presently about what they will charge for LTE services or when they will be available!
Still when did lack of factual information prevent some from having a dig and promoting their well known agenda!
I just said I'd happily pay that next year, we don't know what the costs are at all and it was by no means an advertisement.
Good to note that advertising has been spotted!
Quite sad that so many threads end up being polluted with such stuff.
EE's 4G offering leaves me cold but there can be no justification responding on this thread with promotion of another network's future services.
Indeed, I think we're going to need some kind of rule soon.
"O2 and Three do not exist on this forum"
Who?!?!?
... However you'll probably use up all your (500mb?) allowance in days and end up going onto a much more expensive package.
They will all be similarly priced with similar restrictions.
4G is a new product here, so of course you are going to pay a premium for it.
Yes, because they will all be competing for the most customers, meaning the deals will start coming out. Is it all going to be unlimited or very cheap? no, but there will be package increases and price reductions when there's a more competitive market, also over time the price will drop as more people take it up and therefore the costs per user goes down.
Bandwidth costs and backhaul rates drop over time as well, so yes, over time prices will come down.
Unreliable speeds in limited areas, expensive 2yr contracts with less than generous inclusive data deals which will be used up in a flash. Why would anyone swap from 3G for this?
... and we've not heard from those folks whose freeview signal has been mucked up yet, Daily Mail reckon £10k to sort each household?? (I'd give them freesat)
EE's 4G does not interfere with Freeview, considering it runs on the same frequencies already in use before they launched.. It's the auction frequencies that will potentially cause interference.
I am clearly bonkers!
I do get another 1Gb for 5 quid though, and EE Wednesdays, and a free film to download and some free music streaming thingy, oh and Orange answerphone but with a new slightly mad sounding female voice. Is it mad or sexy? I'm not sure. Maybe a bit of both. Doesn't sound like you should cross her though