If you are talking about Orlando/Central Florida (or anywhere in FL) now or in next couple of weeks be advised that coverage is still spotty for both voice and data due to the hurricane.
> On Sep 17, 2017, at 4:40 PM, Max Tulyev <max...@netassist.ua> wrote: > > Nice advertising, thank you! =) > > But still have open some questions I asked before: > > 1. My phone is not LTE but 3G GSM/UMTS capable (all bands, > 850/900/1700/1900/2100). Will it work? Is 3G coverage good enough in New > York and Orlando for VoIP calls (SIP, Viber, Skype)? > > 2. Is there public or private IP address? IPv6? > > On 17.09.17 22:52, Jean-Francois Mezei wrote: >> On 2017-09-17 13:07, Max Tulyev wrote: >> >> >> AT&T's $45 prepaid pans and its more expemsive sibbling (I think $65) >> allow over 6GB of data at LTE speeds, and the rest is unlimited but at >> 2G speeds (I think). >> >> >> The AT&T plans at the $45 and higher levels allows data and voice >> roaming into Canada, as long as your usage in Canada represents less >> than 50% of total use. >> >> The AT&T plan allows you to remove video throttling (the T-Mobile plan >> doesn't and has more severe net neutrality violations). >> >> If you obtain a SIM card from eBay, there is a hard to find web access >> to set it up (normal AT&T web site forces you to buy a SIM card which >> AT&T won't deliver outside of USA). >> >> https://www.att.com/prepaid/activations/#/activate.html >> >> In my case, I choose AT&T because I tested T-Mobile a few years ago >> along the route taken and found too many areas without service, >> interestingly, one area where in 1998-1999, I had service with Omnipoint >> on a 1900 only phone (Fort Edward NY). >> >> Note on T-Mobile: its coverage map expects you to be on postpaid plans >> which includes areas where you're allowed to roam on AT&T, but not >> necessarily if on prepaid, so hard to tell if you will really get >> service based on its maps. >> >> Also note: AT&T on an iPhone gets to disable the "manual" seach for >> available carriers, so you can't test in a town if T-Mobile would also >> be available. You can insert you own SIM card just to scan for networks >> and with roaming disbaled, you won't encurr any charges by home carrier. >> >