AT&T is trying to address one of the biggest frustrations for wireless phone and internet customers—losing service to outages ...
The Federal Communications Commission gave AT&T Inc. an early Christmas present: permission to replace old copper home-phone lines with a new wireless landline technology. The regulatory step is ...
AT&T’s promise also comes with a list of stipulations for eligibility, which can be found at ATT.com/guarantee. Among them, the company says outages must impact at least 10 or more towers, and users ...
AT&T's new home-phone technology has gained an FCC approval that could open the door for transitioning more communities from old landlines.
AT&T (T) gets FCC approval to replace old copper home phone lines with wireless technology, expanding 5G network and fiber ...
After a series of issues last year, AT&T is starting 2025 with a promise that it will be better going forward.
Use precise geolocation data and actively scan device characteristics for identification. This is done to store and access information on a device and to provide personalised ads and content, ad and ...
Called the AT&T Guarantee, the new initiative promises that users won't be billed for days when the company's network goes ...
AT&T will eliminate its landline phone service in almost ... In 2022, just 1.3% of Americans relied solely on landlines, ...
AT&T Inc. hopes to persuade people across the country to break up with their landlines by the end of 2029. To do so, it’s deploying a new weapon that might help: a wireless home phone.
That’s compared to roughly 183 million who rely on wireless phones. A spokesperson for AT&T told Nexstar, however, that only 5% of its residential customers still use copper voice technology.