Trump, Mobile
Digest more
June 17 (Reuters) - Just hours into Trump Mobile's Monday launch touting American-made smartphones, the venture pulled its coverage map after sharp-eyed users noticed a curious detail: the body of water south of Texas was labeled as the Gulf of Mexico instead of the Trump-preferred name, Gulf of America.
Just hours into Trump Mobile's Monday launch touting American-made smartphones, the venture pulled its coverage map after sharp-eyed users noticed a curious detail: the body of water south of Texas was labeled as the Gulf of Mexico instead of the Trump-preferred name,
The Amplified Home Internet plan offers T-Mobile's fastest speeds — between 134 and 415 Mbps download speeds for most customers — plus advanced cybersecurity, for as low as $45 a month with AutoPay and a voice line. And the Amplified plan also gets you a virtual $300 prepaid card.
The Trump Organization announced June 16 it was coming out with two offerings for consumers: a new cellular service and a new cellphone.
In addition, the new gold-colored "T1" smartphone is currently available for pre-order on the Trump Mobile website for $499, and is set to be released in September. In its press release on Monday, the Trump Organization said that it would be releasing the T1 Phone in August.
Explore more
We don’t know much about the new Trump Mobile phone or the company’s data plan, but we sure do have a lot of questions.
Anything made within the app will automatically sync to your Adobe account, which means you can pull over what you've made into bigger projects.
22h
New York Magazine on MSNIs the Gold Trump Mobile T1 Phone Real? Sort Of!The Trumps really are launching a smartphone. But many of their promises about the American-made T1 phone are impossible.
Although there has been no official announcement, Sega has revealed that it’s discontinuing support for nine retro games that were ported to iOS and Android several years ago. Before that happens, the company has made all the games completely free and removed all in-app purchases, as spotted by Android Authority.
The Federal Communications Commission said on Tuesday it could fine China Mobile for failing to answer questions in the agency's probe to determine if its U.S. operations are seeking to evade American restrictions.