If you’re a Brit, this is a “visible wireless”:
If you’re a Brit, this is a “visible wireless”:
If we have to march off into the next world, let us walk there on the bodies of our enemies.
Nope. I switched from Verizon to Visible over a year ago. Its great. Same quality phine service, at a lower price.
You can't visit a Verizon store for customer service, but the few times I've tried that in the last few years the service was horrible. Verizon.stores don't care about helping customers, only selling products, and/or "upgraded" service.
IF you need CS through Visible you do need to try to resolve it through a chat feature in the app, or website first, but if its not resolved that way you can talk to a real person. Switching my phone was problem free, but there was a problem switching my wife's iPhone. A few minutes of troubleshooting via chat didn't fix it, and a real live person got on the phone with me, and worked with me to solve the problem.
You do need to have a separate account for each line of service, which is mildly annoying, but the cost savings more than makes up for that minor inconvenience.
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"Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?" Then I said, "Here I am. Send me." - Isaiah 6:8
It essentially is how it works. It's using their own excess capacity instead of leasing it from another company but it functions the same and has the same downsides. Video streaming is throttled by default and when their towers are congested Visible users get throttled further or dropped if needed. For users in some places it's never a problem but in other places it can become nearly unusable.
https://www.cnet.com/tech/mobile/che...als-out-there/
". . . Visible isn't a traditional MVNO; the carrier "sits on top of the Verizon network," according to a company representative. That means you get the exact same network coverage as Verizon customers . . ."
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"Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?" Then I said, "Here I am. Send me." - Isaiah 6:8
Coverage is just the geography of where you have service, it says nothing of speed or priority.
So, yes, it's how it works.We may prioritize your data behind other traffic if the cell site you are connected to begins experiencing high demand during the duration of your session. Once the demand on the site lessens, or if you connect to a different site not experiencing high demand, your speed will return to normal.
Even without priority issues, the data is capped lower.
Both quotes directly from their website.Also, if you’re on one of our 5G** Networks, speeds will be capped at 200Mbps.
Sorta around sometimes for some of your shitty mod needs.