band 12
2 TopicsThe Signal Booster DUO (Band 12) is made of UNOBTANIUM
I contacted T-Force who did some research and discovered that the Booster Duo that covers Band 12 and announced in a massive press release has been 'out-of-stock" since late December with no restocking date. Looks like this unit is made of UNOBTANIUM. I don't understand how T-Mobile can still post a web page with the details of this unit if they have no intention of making them available. I REPEAT, PER THE PERSON I SPOKE TO AT T-FORCE, THERE HAS BEEN NO UNIT THROUGHOUT THE COMPANY IN STOCK SINCE DECEMBER. Anyone have an idea of a way to contact the right person at T-Mobile who would honestly explain T-Mobile's future strategy on whether they will actually make these units available. Going through the normal customer service channels just winds up with an out-of-stock answer - no explanation of why a newly announced offering last November stocked very few units in December and hasn't restocked any in the past FOUR months.Solved1.7KViews0likes28ComentariosBlanket signals on the hills where houses are rather than the valleys with the cows and corn?
I live in a suburban to ruralpart of western Washington state. It's called the Lakewood area (between Stanwood, Arlington, Smokey Point and Tulalip) There are many homes that surround Lake Goodwin, Lake Ki and other smaller lakes.. T-Mobile has some excellent tower sites, but is lacking sufficient bandwidth to reach much of thisarea with 5G UC. The area is definitely residential. To this point, T-Mobile has captured fairly well the busy I-5 corridor to the east, but it has also captured some fairly sparsely populated areas, areas near Stanwood and Island Crossingwhere corn and cows predominate, rather thanwhere people populate. I'm hopeful that these more populatedbut underserved residential areas will receive some extra attention in the near future. The service keeps getting better, but is just out of reach for some.80Visto0likes1Comentario