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MetroPCS

MetroPCS
Subsidiary
Industry Telecommunications
Fate bought by T-Mobile
Predecessor General Wireless, Inc.,
MetroPCS Communications, Inc.
Successor T-Mobile
Founded 1994; 23 years ago (1994) (as General Wireless, Inc.)
Founder Roger D. Linquist and Malcolm Lorang
Headquarters Richardson, Texas, United States
Area served
United States
Key people
Thomas C. Keys, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of MetroPCS Business Unit
Products Wireless Phones
Services Cellphone Service
Owner T-Mobile US, Inc.
Website www.metropcs.com

MetroPCS (stylized as metroPCS) is a prepaid wireless service in the United States that is part of T-Mobile US, Inc.. MetroPCS provides nationwide talk, text, and data depending on the plan services using GSM, HSPA, HSPA+ and 4G LTE networks. MetroPCS previously operated the sixth largest mobile telecommunications network in the United States using code division multiple access (CDMA) technology. The legacy MetroPCS CDMA network has been decommissioned on June 21, 2015. Its legacy 4G network using LTE will be integrated with T-Mobile US' own 4G LTE network.

In October 2012, MetroPCS Communications reached an agreement to merge with T-Mobile USA, Inc., a deal that would "help the competing provider become more competitive with the other National Carriers". The deal was a reverse merger for MetroPCS; following the closure of the merger on May 1, 2013, the combined company, now known as T-Mobile US, Inc., began trading on the New York Stock Exchange as TMUS.

MetroPCS was established in 1994 as General Wireless, Inc., by Roger D. Linquist and Malcolm Lorang, both of whom were previously executives with wireless provider PageMart Wireless.

The launch of MetroPCS's LTE network was met with mixed reviews. GigaOM's Kevin Tofel noted that although the LTE network is based on 4G technology, "the infrastructure MetroPCS is using keeps speeds in the range of older 3G networks". Tofel measured data speeds "far slower than T-Mobile's HSPA+ network" but considered that users with only basic data requirements would find the no-contract deal "refreshing". Referencing Tofel's review, Laptop Magazine's Corvida Raven concluded that MetroPCS "probably isn't using the best LTE technology."

Slate's Farhad Manjoo panned the service by suggesting that MetroPCS was able to roll out 4G coverage sooner and cheaper than its competitors by offering only the Samsung Craft, a feature phone with sub-standard internet capabilities, as its launch device. Due to the quality of the device (described as being "designed not just to frustrate users but to get us to swear off ever using any phone again"), the network, and MetroPCS's decision to block video streaming services aside from YouTube under its "unlimited web" plan, Manjoo considered it a device designed to disappoint users excited for 4G.


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