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A new school year year is about to begin, but for those households who can not afford to avail of wireless service, at least for their members who are studying in high school, it is going to be extra tough for their kids to complete school work that requires Internet research. Thankfully, the fourth biggest wireless carrier in the United States is doing something about it.
According to the results of a study recently conducted by the Kinsey Institute of Indiana University (jointly done with Clue, a women’s health startup firm based in Berlin, Germany), 67 percent of the polled participants have claimed that they have tried sexting somebody.
According to the results of a survey recently conducted by Circles.Life in Singapore, it turns out that about half of consumers today can not last more than a day without mobile data. For those not familiar with Circles.Life, it is considered the newest wireless carrier based in Singapore (the company made its debut in May of last year only), and it took the time to ask about 900 mobile users aged between 16 years old to 54 years old.
US Mobile’s new Unlimited WiFi plan may well be considered the biggest of its kind in the world, in terms of providing WiFi coverage. For a price of just $10 a month, the offering gives mobile users access to more than 60 million hotspots in over 120 countries around the planet, as well as more than 35 million hotspots in the United States alone.
You might have already encountered at least one if you are an owner of a mobile phone. Robocalls used to annoy the heck out of landline phones, but now that we are living in a world wherein people are about be likely to own a cell phone than a landline phone, robocalls are starting to invade our handsets. So how do we deal?
Here is a hot summer deal for anybody looking for a budget friendly wireless service -- if you purchase any new mobile plan from Tello, the mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) will be giving you free data. To avail of the deal, you will have to get a plan with a price of at least $10, and once you do that, your data will be free of charge (even if you choose as much as 5 gigabytes of data).
Just this week, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has voted unanimously to go over a system that would basically let phone companies determine if a particular number calling a customer is legitimate or not. The main objective of this system, of course, is to crack down on unscrupulous callers, especially those that take full advantage of automated calls that make use of a fake phone number (disguised so that recipients will take the call).
Qualcomm is now requesting the approval of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) with regards to an update to the chip maker’s current license so that it can include unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) in the license’s scope. The company has already utilized the 3560 to 3650 MegaHertz frequency range in trying to explore 4G LTE technologies under the call sign WH2XIN, but now it is looking to have its licensed updated to make room for 5G development trials.
No matter how hard we wish it so, 5G is still not commercially available. But the good news is that the Big Four carriers in America (Verizon Wireless, AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint) are also busy beginning to transition to this wireless technology over the course of the next couple of years.