A leaked press render of Sony’s latest flagship handset, the Xperia Z1, has surfaced on the internet, indicating that the device will be available to purchase on T-Mobile U.S. in the not-to-distant future.
A leaked press render of Sony’s latest flagship handset, the Xperia Z1, has surfaced on the internet, indicating that the device will be available to purchase on T-Mobile U.S. in the not-to-distant future.
The President of HTC America, Jason Mackenzie, took to Twitter again to announce that the company is still on track and is now working with T-Mobile in order to bring the much-anticipated Android 4.3 update to all carrier-branded One handsets. The upgrade is expected to be pushed out over-the-air (OTA) by the “middle” of this week.
AT&T has once again broadened its horizons by upgrading and expanding its LTE connectivity services to an additional 28 locations across the U.S. The announcement was made in a sequential series of press releases on the carrier’s website. The newly announced locations mean that the operator now provides 4G coverage to over 240 million people in 437 sites, which, according to AT&T, puts it “ahead of schedule.”
U.S. Cellular together with Motorola are in the process of preparing a much-anticipated update for the Moto X. The upgrade is a duplicate of what we’ve already seen T-Mobile, Sprint and AT&T roll out to their carrier-branded devices, bringing a multitude of camera improvements and bug fixes.
If you’ve ever traveled internationally and been unlucky or unknowing enough to keep on using your smartphone’s data as if you were still in the fatherland, you’ll know that watching a single YouTube video on a foreign network can result in a few hunded dollars being added to your bill.
International roaming charges are so insane that the European Commission is actually planning to abolish them altogether. But looks like T-Mobile beat them to the punch: the uncarrier is now promising free global data in over 100 different countries, no extra charge.