![]() ![]() The crab legs don't get refilled as often as the beef with broccoli. The throttling is like the all-you-can-eat buffet. If you use more internet service, you pay more than the person who uses less. If you run the AC on full blast during the summer you pay more because you used more electricity. You pay your electric bill every month based on what you use. I recently heard an analogy of comparing internet usage to electric company usage. On the onther plans, there is no throttling, but you have a limit and you pay for your usage when you go over that limit. To be more fair to everyone, the heavy users were throttled. The throttling was enabled because unlimited data users only pay a fixed rate, and not based on what they use, so a few users were using 50-80% of the bandwidth in some markets, but paying the same as the users who only used 500MB. If you look at your unlimited plan, you are only getting 5GB of data before you get throttled, so the new rate plan could save you frustration in the end, and you can look at it as paying a small fee for removing your throttling. Yes, the Mobile Share plan will cost you $15/month more, but you get 10GB of data before you worry about any additional charges, and you don't get throttled. With the Mobile Share plan, yo ualso get free usage as a Mobile Hotspot, and you do not have to worry about throttling. Additionally, if you go over 10GB data usage, you would only pay $15/GB for your additional usage. This means you would be paying $115 for unlimited talk & text, plaus 10GB of data. If you migrate to a Mobile Share Value Plan, you would pay $100 for 10GB data and $15 for unlimited talk & text using your existing smartphone or brining in another off-contract device. If you have more minutes, you pay more for your service. That means you will be paying $100/month (plus taxes and fees) for your service. That would mean that you are paying $50/month for your 550 voice minutes (with roll over), $30 for your unlimited data, and $20 for your unlimited texts. ![]() I would guess that right now you have your iPhone (or other smart phone) with the unlimited data plan, and probably unlimited texting as well. I dont think I will get suckered into changing my plan. I guess the best way to do that is by make their unlimited data so slow that it becomes useless. You guys are just scaming unlimited users because you guys want to get rid of them. Why do you impose these slow speeds on me if I have only gone over the "limit" of my unlimited plan only 2 times out of the 84 months that I have been a custmer Are you kidding me? So my speeds are droping to dial up because other users use too much of the bandwidth. So your saying that I should pay more for the same service I have now and pay the overage fees if I go over the non unlimited data. ![]()
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