Which is better mobilicity or wind




















My peeve with Wind is, don't advertise something is unlimited, unless you mean it how is minutes a day unlimited?

I've only heard of these issues with Wind. A lso, with Mobilicity, you can use 1 sim card and switch back and forth between a blackberry and a smartphone not possible under Wind and some people like having this option. Guy named Drew at the Church and Dundas location helped me, he's great, very knowledgable, forthright helpful and honest gent.

I've been on Symbian with the Nokia e61, great phone, Sybian is functional but meh Great keyboard, and great that it hides away 'cuz many things you can do you don't need it for. I'm getting use to the touch screen, it's very sensitive. I'm thinking I'll use the "backtrack" pad once I get the hang of it, it allows you to scroll and read with one hand The most pressing issue, he said, is making sure his network has the capacity to perform basic functions like making calls and loading photos.

Then he gets to worry about the big picture. Previous Next. By Daniel Bader. Related Articles. He died for me , I live for him. Competition creates innovation which in the end serves the consumer better. Can anyone tell me if Mobilicity has this as well? Mobilicity is back with an awesome plan!

Again as the 1st post states, leading by providing value. How so? I have a question about Mobilicity. East in Toronto, Ontario Tuesday, September 24, Startup wireless carrier Wind Mobile Corp. As part of a series of spectrum licence transfers from both fellow new entrant Mobilicity and Shaw Communications Inc. Wind paid a bargain-basement price for a significant chunk of licences in a spectrum auction in March, but it cannot yet deploy service with those airwaves because the necessary ecosystem of mobile devices for that frequency band does not yet exist.

The airwaves it will get through the Rogers transactions — which are in the same frequency band Wind bought in and built its original network with — will allow it to start building an LTE long-term evolution or fourth-generation network immediately.

The Rogers proposal allowed the government to finally approve a deal for long-floundering Mobilicity, give Wind another spectrum boost and a quick path to LTE and, at the same time, address the sticky issue of what to do with an option agreement Rogers struck in early to buy unused spectrum from Shaw. The fact that the transactions cleaned up so many outstanding issues and offered more help to Wind is believed to have been central to the federal government's willingness to approve the deal over one with Telus that did not offer as much of a benefit to Wind and left the Shaw spectrum stranded.

Talks heated up over the past two weeks, with a flurry of offers and counteroffers, and Rogers had a team of 20 people in Ottawa and Toronto working on the transaction.

Sources said Telus offered to pay more, but Mobilicity's stakeholders were more confident they could win government approval of the Rogers deal. After more than two years of attempts to win Mobilicity's spectrum, Telus executives are said to be disappointed with the outcome and weighing a legal challenge of some sort.

Telus did not reply to a request for comment Wednesday.



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