If you've been thinking about checking out Google's Project Fi wireless service, now is your chance.
The
Mountain View, California, Internet search titan said Monday it's
giving out "instant invites" to the service for the next 24 hours.
Interested users can sign up directly on the company's website.
Project
Fi is Google's attempt to shake up the wireless industry with cheaper
plans that also reduce the strain on carrier networks. The service uses a
combination of cellular coverage from T-Mobile and Sprint and local
Wi-Fi networks. It has largely been an experiment, with the service
available only by invitation and only on Google's Nexus 6 smartphone.
Project Fi uses Sprint's and T-Mobile's networks if Wi-Fi is unavailable.
Josh Miller/CNET
Google
is opening up the service as its new smartphones hit the market. Last
month, Google said the Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P would support Project Fi.
The Nexus 5X went on sale today.
What's most likely to attract
consumers to try Project Fi is its low cost. Users in the US pay $20 a
month for unlimited calls and texts. Adding data costs $10 for each
gigabyte used. If customers don't use their allotted amount in a month,
they get a credit in the form of more data.
Google hopes to upend
the traditional carrier business model by using more than a million
Wi-Fi hotspots that provide cheap access to the Internet and using
cellular service to fill the gaps. A key aspect of Project Fi's service
is technology that determines which network offers the best connection.
It can seamlessly switch among these networks if one connection weakens.
This is similar to other services from companies like Republic
Wireless, Scratch Wireless and FreedomPop. They were among the first
companies to build mobile businesses that use free Wi-Fi networks but
then switch to cellular service as a backup when Wi-Fi is not available.Source===CNET====
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