Makes sense to me. "T-MobileWeb" sounds like a branded service, not the open web that I would expect to gain access to through an unlimited data plan connection.
This is crying about branding, come on, stop making a big deal out of things you already knew the answer to beforehand. Anyone looking to gain access to the web on their mobile phone is going to be savvy enough to realize that a $5.99/month service called "T-MobileWeb" isn't going to provide unlimited access to the web without a multi-step workaround that would get you banned from the service if they found out you were doing it.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Seth @ May 10th 2007 8:13PM
Makes sense to me. "T-MobileWeb" sounds like a branded service, not the open web that I would expect to gain access to through an unlimited data plan connection.
This is crying about branding, come on, stop making a big deal out of things you already knew the answer to beforehand. Anyone looking to gain access to the web on their mobile phone is going to be savvy enough to realize that a $5.99/month service called "T-MobileWeb" isn't going to provide unlimited access to the web without a multi-step workaround that would get you banned from the service if they found out you were doing it.