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T-Mobile Complete: a $300 contract-free BlackBerry Curve 8520 with one month service

November 18, 2009

Good old T-Mobile’s on a roll these days with new phone plans, and this one seems perfectly catered to stocking stuffers. The quartet of phones start at $59.99, but so far we know of two: BlackBerry Curve 8520 for $299.99 and the Pearl for $149.99, according to the Best Buy stores we contacted. There’s no contract commitment, and according to the press release, the first month is included in the bill from the point the phone’s out of the box and activated. We don’t know the details of that first month of service (data? texting?), but it’s still a pretty penny for an unsubsidized handset. After that second month, of course, T-Mo’s probably hoping you’ll be enticed to keep with the network. If not already, you should start seeing the phones pop up at local Best Buy and select Walmart locales shortly. Press release after the break.

Continue reading T-Mobile Complete: a $300 contract-free BlackBerry Curve 8520 with one month service

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T-Mobile Complete: a $300 contract-free BlackBerry Curve 8520 with one month service originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Nov 2009 22:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile to myFaves: ‘Good day, sir; I said good day’

November 9, 2009

T-Mobile is now offering unlimited voice for little enough cash through its Even More promo these days that it’s officially bidding myFaves adieu, spelling out the final chapter of one of the better-known plan packages in the US wireless biz. It won’t go away completely — the myFaves app will apparently continue to be offered as a convenient, cutesy way to access five frequent contacts and existing subscribers won’t be kicked off their plans — but for new subscribers, Even More is being billed as the spiritual successor. For the record, unlimited voice through Even More Plus starts at $49.99, so the price is definitely right — but more importantly will this end up meaning that we lose the beloved silkscreened myFaves logo on the back of virtually every T-Mobile handset sold today?

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T-Mobile to myFaves: ‘Good day, sir; I said good day’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Nov 2009 21:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony exec says UMD-less PSP was "always the plan"

July 2, 2009

Well, it’s no secret that plenty of folks have been talking about a UMD-less PSP since day one, but it looks like that’s been the case behind the scenes at Sony as well, at least according to the company’s head of product planning, Naoya Matsui. Speaking with GameBusiness.jp, he said that Sony has “planned to release a PSP model without a UMD drive since the very beginning,” but that if “we’d simply released the hardware, there wouldn’t have been much for everyone to enjoy,” adding that Sony “needed to prepare the right environment for it first – things like the transferal of content with the PS3 and PSN, and PC software to manage content like music and movies such as Media Go.” Matsui further went on to explain that Sony also had to wait until the “delivery of digital content was on par with the delivery of physical media,” which it obviously thinks has now finally happened.

[Via Joystiq]

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Sony exec says UMD-less PSP was “always the plan” originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jul 2009 14:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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