Wireless phone from Google threatens major carriers

Wireless phone from Google threatens major carriers
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Highlights

Google is trying to shake up the wireless phone industry with a low-priced service designed to pressure major carriers into making it more affordable for people to get online and use Google\'s services.

Google is trying to shake up the wireless phone industry with a low-priced service designed to pressure major carriers into making it more affordable for people to get online and use Google's services.

The service, called "Project Fi," debuted on April 22, about two months after Google revealed its plans to expand its ever-growing empire into providing wireless connections for smartphones. Google Inc. is selling the basic phone service for USD 20 a month and will only charge customers for the amount of cellular data that they use each month, instead of a flat rate.
Each gigabyte of data will cost USD 10 a month. That means a customer could sign up for a plan offering three gigabytes of data and get USD 20 back if only one gigabyte was used in a month. Most wireless phone carriers allow their customers to roll over unused data into another month of service without refunding any money.
Project Wi-Fi initially will only be sold to a narrow audience that owns the Nexus 6, a smartphone that Motorola Mobility made with Google's help. Google's pricing setup makes Project Fi less expensive than most of the comparable plans offering by the four biggest wireless phone carriers Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile and Sprint.
The monthly prices for a single line of smartphone service with up to one gigabyte of cellular data at those carriers range from USD 45 to USD 50 compared to USD 30 from Google, before subtracting any potential credits for unused data. The major carriers, though, offer a variety of family plans that could still be better deals than Project Fi.
Those bundled plans allow several phone lines to share a pool of cellular data. Besides trying to bring down the prices of wireless phone plans, Google is promising subscribers that their Nexus 6 model will automatically connect with the fastest network available.
Rather than building its own network, Google is leasing space on cellular towers built by Sprint and T-Mobile, which are hoping the deals will boost their profits without costing them too many customers tempted to defect to Project Fi. Google is promising Project Fi will automatically switch over to an available Wi-Fi network if that is running at a higher speed than the cellular alternatives.
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