T-Mobile on Wednesday officially took the wraps off its 5G-powered fixed wireless Internet service, dubbed T-Mobile Home Internet.
The offering costs $60 per month, promises download speeds around 100Mbit/s and does not cap customers monthly usage. The company said it is now offering the service across 30 million households. A third of those locations are in rural areas, and the rest are in suburban and urban areas. The company s target area represents around 24% of all US households.
T-Mobile has said it expects to count around 500,000 fixed wireless customers by the end of this year. Within the next five years, T-Mobile said it expects to gain between 7 million and 8 million fixed wireless Internet customers. That figure is slightly below the estimates T-Mobile provided in 2018, when it said it would gain 9.5 million customers within that rough time frame. The figures position T-Mobile far behind the likes of Comcast (roughly 30 million home broadband customers today), Charter
DIY Peloton bike: How to build your own smart cycle on the cheap
You don t need to spend $1,900 on a bike and $40 monthly on a service. Check out these much cheaper do-it-yourself options.
Want the Peloton experience without the Peloton price? You ve got options. Peloton
Indoor exercise bikes have been around forever, but it feels like Peloton turned what used to be a dull, monotonous fitness activity into something exciting. Unfortunately, Peloton also turned it into something expensive: With prices ranging from $1,895 to $2,495, these smart bikes cost considerably more than most dumb ones. And that s not even factoring in the required subscription for exercise classes, which runs $40 a month.