Whatever is coming will apparently concern “ALL” of the “Un-carrier’s” customers, including those who haven’t been able to
migrate from Sprint just yet. Sievert also claims that the mystery thing T-Mo will be tackling on Thursday is “more important than ever”, which suggests this move might be aimed at making the lives of wireless users easier in a pandemic environment… somehow.
All in all, it’s certainly difficult to make an educated guess based on these cryptic hints, but something tells us T-Mobile has a major
5G network unification trick up its sleeve. Either that or Magenta is getting ready to
kill off the Sprint brand at last. Our original post follows below.
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T-Mobile has had a tumultuous few months since finally announcing the completion of its Sprint merger back on April 1, making both positive and negative headlines with incredible 5G breakthroughs, super-compelling deals for new and existing customers, one huge outage, and several rounds of somewhat predictable layoffs that the company insisted would never happen.
What Magenta hasn’t had in quite some time is an exciting “Un-carrier” event, which is precisely what helped the now-former CEO John Legere right the sinking ship all those years ago. Started in 2013, the industry-shifting marketing campaign quickly became a tradition acclaimed by T-Mo’s fast-growing subscriber base and detested by the Verizon/AT&T duopoly.
Well, it looks like
it’s time for another game-changing announcement at last, although for now, we haven’t the faintest idea what might be in store for July 16. All we know is a special webcast hosted by none other than Golden Globe and six-time Emmy nominee Anthony Anderson will kick off at 8:30 am PT (11:30 am ET) on Thursday, with
T-Mobile set to unveil “how a supercharged Un-carrier will continue to change wireless for good.”
That basically means we haven’t had a major all-new Un-carrier announcement in more than eight months, which makes us incredibly excited to see what Legere heir Mike Sievert has up his sleeve.
Obviously, our best guess is that whatever is in the pipeline will have something to do with 5G and T-Mobile’s ongoing efforts of merging its nationwide low-band signal with
Sprint’s mid-band spectrum while also sprinkling some blazing fast mmWave technology
on top of the “layer cake” to crush Verizon in terms of availability while providing stiff competition on speeds as well.
A teaser posted on Twitter by Sievert isn’t exactly helpful in solving the puzzle ahead of the actual July 16 event, merely reminding us of all the great things unveiled at these shindigs in the past, including the death of traditional contracts and early termination fees, the introduction of Simple Choice plans, Music Freedom, Netflix on Us, Carrier Freedom, T-Mobile Tuesdays, Binge On, and so on and so forth.