Virgin Mobile Leaves Unlimited Data Plans to Sprint
Virgin Mobile will reportedly stop offering its $40 unlimited 3G Broadband2Go data plan. With AT&T having cut off the data hogs and Verizon wavering, Sprint now stands alone.
Virgin Mobile is the latest carrier to cancel its unlimited wireless data plan. The carrier will stop offering its $40 all-you-can-eat 3G Broadband2Go data plan after Feb. 15, PC World has reported, writing that Virgin said it needs "to implement network controls to ensure optimal experience."
AT&T-buckling under the weight of its data-devouring
iPhone customers-was the first to step
away from the buffet. In June 2010, it
announced that instead of $30 a month for unlimited data, it would offer 200MB
a month for $15 or 2GB a month for $25. In a statement at the time, it added
that 98 percent of AT&T customers used less than 2GB of data per month.
(The implication being: We're helping you save money! If you want to spend
more, that's your decision!)
While Verizon
introduced an iPhone of its own Jan. 11-and turned on its LTE 4G
network Dec. 5-it has yet to offer details on data plans for the Apple
smartphone, prompting speculation that an unlimited plan, if offered, could
reach $120 a month.
On Oct. 22, during
Verizon's third quarter earnings call, Verizon CFO John Killian announced that
the carrier, "as a holiday promotion," would offer tiered data pricing,
suggesting that the right tack was still being worked out.
"We like the concept of tiered pricing," Killian
explained during the call, "but we will continue to look at this. We
will probably have some pricing changes when we roll out 4G and 4G pricing, so
there will be more to come then."
The Virgin Mobile decision leaves Sprint alone in offering unlimited
data-its Simply Everything plan includes unlimited data, talking,
messaging
and Direct Connect for $70.
"Our ability to offer unlimited 4G we think is the best way to
get people to use it," said a Sprint spokesperson, according to Jan. 10 report
from Mobiledia. Despite having a major
lead in the 4G race, it took a bit of time for Sprint to gain momentum-and to
start gaining more customers each month than it lost. Its Samsung Epic 4G and
HTC Evo 4G smartphones, however, have been a big help, and at the 2011 Consumer
Electronics Show, it introduced two new 4G-enabled products (including an
updated Evo), bringing its tally to 17 devices.
The Sprint spokesperson added, "We want to get people in
that mode of experiencing the Internet like they would at home or at the
office."









