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Communications

T-Mobile Delays Shutdown of Sprint's CDMA Network (axios.com) 33

T-Mobile has said that it will extend by three months its planned shutdown of Sprint's old CDMA network. It now plans to shutter the network at the end of March, rather than Jan. 1, 2022. From a report: The move follows complaints by Dish Network that shutting down the network will hurt millions of its customers who own devices that still access the older network. In a statement, T-Mobile says it needs to shut down the older network to create more bandwidth for 5G, but said extending support for three months won't materially affect its plans. T-Mobile added it has done its part to transition the former Sprint customers on its network.
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T-Mobile Delays Shutdown of Sprint's CDMA Network

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  • Thought it said COMA network. Was thinking, "That explains a lot..."
  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Monday October 25, 2021 @11:46AM (#61924883)
    Your slogan is "5G for America". How about getting around to doing that?
  • by slaker ( 53818 ) on Monday October 25, 2021 @01:30PM (#61925317)

    I loved my LG G8. I had a Sprint version of that phone. I got a Galaxy S20 Ultra to replace it after getting WEEKLY messages from T-mobile that I needed to replace my phone.

    The LG had an instant-access rear fingerprint reader that had gesture support. It had a headphone jack and an SD card. I used all that stuff. The newest flagship phones have none of those things, but since switching, I'm missing my proper fingerprint reader more than anything. The one in the S20 takes about a second to operate, and that's if I actually manage to find it on the screen with my first thumb press. I usually don't.

    I really have had buyer's remorse about giving up the phone I actually liked, even if the new one has double the RAM and 5G support that doesn't seem to do anything for me anyway.

    • I'm still using some super old Motorola Photon Q's that I've had since 2014 or so. I don't use them for my daily stuff, they're more used as placeholders for some phone numbers I need to keep but don't(yet) have a good phone to use with them. When they announced the upgrade I was panicking because even if I bought used phones at $100 each, I'd still not have $$$ for Xmas and shit. Yes, that means I have a fuck ton of phone numbers I barely use. At least this will let me spread the spending out somewhat and

  • by Torodung ( 31985 ) on Monday October 25, 2021 @01:42PM (#61925357) Journal

    Don't let T-Mobile fool you. The real reason they won't shut down CDMA is because they sent out a bunch of SIM cards to Sprint users of 4G/3G/2G phones, and they don't work because T-Mobile's network is 5G only. I received a SIM for my old 4G phone, the website said I was eligible, the phone rep said it would work, and it wouldn't because it's not a 5G phone. I put it in. No data. I had to spend hours with Sprint support getting my old SIM reactivated. Seriously. They are sending 5G cards to 4G phone users right now, unless they finally realized how dumb that is.

    After that, I went to the store to switch to T-Mobile from Sprint and get 5G phones. I received what they call the "Sprint Select" offer. It's a really good offer, with a free third line and a significant discount on new 5G phones.

    Here's the situation at the store: They have TWO people working there. Wait times are terrible. Other people were there trying to transition to T-Mobile off of Sprint (we need to get new accounts) and they were being rejected because it wasn't their turn in the rollout yet (they weren't "Sprint Select"). Another guy came in who had thrown out his old SIM card when he put in those broken SIMs I mentioned, and complained that the new one didn't work. He was screwed. He left, announcing that he was done with T-Mobile.

    Personally, I was ready to switch, but they didn't have 5G phones for me and so they couldn't make good on their "really good offer." I waited 2 hours (remember, they're short staffed) for them to tell me that I couldn't upgrade because there were no phones for me. I was in Janesville, Wisconsin. Not a huge city, but definitely big enough to warrant more than two people. They usually have four people on.

    That's when I left them. I'm happily on a new carrier. T-Mobile got too big for it's britches, too fast, and they cannot handle absorbing Sprint customers rn.

    The whole thing is a hot mess and they need to keep Sprint users' 4G/3G/2G phones active until they can fix it. The chip supply problem doesn't help - I'm guessing that's why they were out of 5G phones - but they've got a bunch of 4G users who they will and can not accommodate on their bleeding edge network, and they don't know what to do but punt.

    A cautionary tale for anyone trying to scale up their operation while deprecating perfectly good, if aging, technology at the same time. I'm sure they'll be fine without Sprint's customers.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The real reason they won't shut down CDMA is because they sent out a bunch of SIM cards to Sprint users of 4G/3G/2G phones, and they don't work because T-Mobile's network is 5G only. I received a SIM for my old 4G phone, the website said I was eligible, the phone rep said it would work, and it wouldn't because it's not a 5G phone. I put it in. No data.

      I'm not sure that last part is accurate, at least in my area. I tried switching my Pixel 5a from 5G to LTE and data works fine. Are you sure it's not because your phone doesn't support something else like the data frequency band or VoLTE (obviously not a "data" issue), etc... and T-Mobile just got the compatibility wrong? For reference, my carrier is Ting using T-Mobile.

    • This is why /. gets dumber every day. Just about everything is wrong in that scree.

    • by jjhall ( 555562 )

      T-Mobile bought a hot mess to begin with. I've been through all the carriers basically over the years with the exception of T-Mobile. At one point I was on Nextel, and I loved their service. Great, reliable signal almost everywhere I went. They had crummy data speeds and they didn't jump on the smartphone bandwagon fast enough, so I ended up switching back to AT&T/Cingular for a while. Eventually that got too expensive so I switched over to Sprint and got a great plan and Android phones. They were

It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.

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