T-Mobile’s 5G mega-spend continues with Nokia, Ericsson deals
T-Mobile US has signed two 5G equipment deals with Nokia and Ericsson, both of which carry multi-billion-dollar valuations.
T-Mobile US has signed two 5G equipment deals with Nokia and Ericsson, both of which carry multi-billion-dollar valuations.
T-Mobile is tapping the bond markets to raise US$3 billion that will help to fund its upcoming spending on spectrum.
T-Mobile US is crowing about the growth in its customer base over the past year, but appears to be studiously ignoring the effect its acquisition of Sprint has had on the figures.
Thanks primarily to the addition of Sprint, the self-styled Uncarrier has turned in a particularly strong set of third quarter results.
The FCC has slapped T-Mobile US with a $200 million fine for fraudulently collecting millions of dollars in government subsidies designed to help low-income phone customers.
Never one to pass up an opportunity to make its rivals look bad, T-Mobile US is extending its fixed-wireless access (FWA) service to areas left in the lurch by AT&T’s DSL phase-out.
Shareholders in Japanese tech conglomerate SoftBank are having to come to terms with the fact that it’s now effectively an investment fund.
The first major announcement since the merger with Sprint was completed sees TMUS go after the big two on unlimited price plans.
Japanese conglomerate SoftBank had a nightmare quarter thanks to massive losses at its Vision Fund investment arm and it might need to raise a few yen quickly.
The New York Federal District Court has ruled T-Mobile US and Sprint can finally go ahead and merge if they can still be bothered.
Having secured a bunch of 5G network commitments, the US telecoms regulator has given its seal of approval to the merger of TMUS and Sprint.
AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon have created the Cross Carrier Messaging Initiative to push the Rich Communications Service standard on Android.
Ever the disruptor, TMUS CEO John Legere has identified a combination so obvious that everyone else missed it: fusing mobile phones with tacos.
A trio of telecoms trailblazers has claimed the world’s first low-band 5G data session on a commercial 5G modem.
It looks like Sprint could trouser up to three billion bucks when it flogs its prepaid subsidiary Boost in a bid to placate antitrust authorities.
US operators have been reselling the location data they accumulate about their subscribers and have been slow to deliver on promises to stop.
German operator group Deutsche Telekom has reported solid Q1 revenue growth, driven largely by T-Mobile US.
T-Mobile US wasted little time in snapping up former Ericsson lifer Ulf Ewaldsson after he came on the market, to head up its 5G efforts.
In spite of the many moral panics of 2018, the abuse of personal data shows no sign of abating at the start of 2019.
The attempt by US operator AT&T to rebrand LTE-A as 5Ge has quite rightly left it open to ridicule.
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