T-Mobile Business = 877-347-2127 If you're having problems.
Internal T-Mobile's plan names:
"Bus Unl Tablet 10 GB HS TE" = Taxes and fees extra. SOC code ZB10HSTE
"Bus Unl Tablet 10 GB HS TI" = Taxes and fees included. SOC code ZB10HSTI
For adding HD Video Pass use SOC code : HDVPASS0
Who's eligible
- Available to new lines of service only. No voice line requirement.
- US and Puerto Rico (SJP) Business customers.
- Tax Exclusive Plan: B/C, B/L, B/M, B/N, B/O, B/P, I/S.
- Tax Inclusive Plan: B/C, B/L, B/N, B/P, I/S, Both TI and TE $10 Unlimited Tablet Promo Plan included within the following SOC Groups: 5, 9, 9A, 10, 10B, 21, 22, 34, 41, 59, and 67.
- Government account types
- Consumer customers
- Cannot be combined with tax included plans.
- Retired features and promotional lines/service credit offers will be removed upon switching to this plan.
- Tax Exclusive plans only eligible to Tax Exclusive BANS
- Tax Inclusive plans only eligible to Tax Inclusive BANS
- Voice line not required
- No migrations
- There is no annual contract (Un-contract) or activation fee.
- These plans do not include Music Freedom, Binge On, or Data Stash.
- All on-network data used counts towards fair-use de-prioritization limits.
Not available
- AVD
- Netflix on Us
- $40 Voice + Tablet credit.
- $5 AutoPay bill credit ($5 per line, up to 8 lines / $40 max credit). See the page for more details.
From this post
The multiple ways of using this $10 line for home internet are:
1. T-Mobile Gateway + Cudy N300 or X6 which are wifi only routers to mask hotspot usage with TTL set on the external wifi router. You can use other wifi routers for this purpose but there's a menu page in the Cudy routers which makes setting TTL easy - Courtesy waterchange
1.1 Cudy router like Cudy LT500 or LT18 or the 5G P8 work as a single device with modem + wifi router. Work well for home internet. Nice thing about the Cudy modems is easy TTL (and imei magic if necessary). - Courtesy waterchange
2. M2100 hotspot device - Hit or a miss - native out of the box but less reliable
3. Orbic 5G hotspot device - more reliable than the m2100, however some people have reported throttling after 1st couple of months
4. Gateway + Project Genesis - works most reliably
5. TMOHS1 - ~ 30-50 mbps out of the box, no TTL update required
6. Tmobile Franklin - ~30-50 mbps with TTL update - the most reliable as of right now, however limited speed.
7. M2000 won't pull data from anywhere.
8. GL.iNET Spitz GL-X3000NR easier to use than Cudy and better performance but expensive. Great form factor and performance. Presets for T-Mobile TTL settings and advanced cell features like tower/band lock. External antennas.
9. M3000B works out of the box with T-Mobile version. Has battery preservation features and ethernet port. Some users say to switch 5G mode to NSA if the hotspot restarts frequently in your area.
Add/update if you have more/better info.



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They will still lock you to a 2 year EIP even if it's free (They'll make a monthly credit to cover the tablet EIP)
Meaning you'd end up paying $10 for 2 years ($240) for a $129 tablet.
So if you're only doing it for the tablet then it's not worth it
soc code ZB10HSTI is the one you want.
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Sorry - is Fast.com checking general download speed or does it check video download speed?
Fast.com is operated by Netflix and is showing you your video streaming speed. Based on that and the fact that I'm seeing 6-7 Mbps only I shouldn't be able to stream 4K content except when using HS data
Right now I am using 192.168.2.1 as my login , will that change if I mess with the firmware or change DNS?
In router mode, regardless of TTL spoof feature enabled/disabled, Fast.com between 6-7 Mbps
In AP mode Fast.com yields the full speed that Speedtest also gets
What gives?
In router mode, regardless of TTL spoof feature enabled/disabled, Fast.com between 6-7 Mbps
In AP mode Fast.com yields the full speed that Speedtest also gets
What gives?
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But in all seriousness, I just want to know why, that's all. Several people stated that Asus stock FW shouldn't change the TTL value, and yet it does and even so when the feature is disabled.
But in all seriousness, I just want to know why, that's all. Several people stated that Asus stock FW shouldn't change the TTL value, and yet it does and even so when the feature is disabled.
The main objective with spoof TTL is to bypass the ISP's "HOTSPOT" data cap. Altering the TTL value should not limit the transfer speed of a particular website to 7Mbps unless the ISP throttle the speed of that website if the T Mo unit is not operating as the primary router.
The main objective with spoof TTL is to bypass the ISP's "HOTSPOT" data cap. Altering the TTL value should not limit the transfer speed of a particular website to 7Mbps unless the ISP throttle the speed of that website if the T Mo unit is not operating as the primary router.
Fast.com is operated by Netflix and shows your video streaming speed. If the speed shown is the same as the speed you get on Speedtest, your video streaming is not throttled. If the speed is lower, it is throttled. So far pretty clear.
Now, when TMO detects and delivers a video stream to you, it does that in one of two ways. One, they recognize that you're on a mobile device (tablet, phone) and sends you the stream at the throttled speed. Why? Because your device has unlimited data and they're trying to limit the usage this way. Two, they recognize that you're tethering your data (via the TTL value of your IP packets) and DON'T throttle your video data. Why? Because you only have a certain data allotment and will eventually run out of it. Their damage is very limited.
When you run Fast.com it'll indicate to you whether TMO thinks you're tethering (i.e., full speed) or that you are on a mobile device (throttled speed). Based on this, I am curious why my router seems to be modifying the TTL value of my IP packets even when the feature is disabled.
And to top this issue off, I want to know why on earth my Apple TV that is connected to my router (when in router mode) can stream 4K content flawlessly even though Fast.com is showing throttled speeds.
I hope this clears up the question that I asked.
Fast.com is operated by Netflix and shows your video streaming speed. If the speed shown is the same as the speed you get on Speedtest, your video streaming is not throttled. If the speed is lower, it is throttled. So far pretty clear.
Now, when TMO detects and delivers a video stream to you, it does that in one of two ways. One, they recognize that you're on a mobile device (tablet, phone) and sends you the stream at the throttled speed. Why? Because your device has unlimited data and they're trying to limit the usage this way. Two, they recognize that you're tethering your data (via the TTL value of your IP packets) and DON'T throttle your video data. Why? Because you only have a certain data allotment and will eventually run out of it. Their damage is very limited.
When you run Fast.com it'll indicate to you whether TMO thinks you're tethering (i.e., full speed) or that you are on a mobile device (throttled speed). Based on this, I am curious why my router seems to be modifying the TTL value of my IP packets even when the feature is disabled.
And to top this issue off, I want to know why on earth my Apple TV that is connected to my router (when in router mode) can stream 4K content flawlessly even though Fast.com is showing throttled speeds.
I hope this clears up the question that I asked.
Fast.com is operated by Netflix and shows your video streaming speed. If the speed shown is the same as the speed you get on Speedtest, your video streaming is not throttled. If the speed is lower, it is throttled. So far pretty clear.
Now, when TMO detects and delivers a video stream to you, it does that in one of two ways. One, they recognize that you're on a mobile device (tablet, phone) and sends you the stream at the throttled speed. Why? Because your device has unlimited data and they're trying to limit the usage this way. Two, they recognize that you're tethering your data (via the TTL value of your IP packets) and DON'T throttle your video data. Why? Because you only have a certain data allotment and will eventually run out of it. Their damage is very limited.
When you run Fast.com it'll indicate to you whether TMO thinks you're tethering (i.e., full speed) or that you are on a mobile device (throttled speed). Based on this, I am curious why my router seems to be modifying the TTL value of my IP packets even when the feature is disabled.
And to top this issue off, I want to know why on earth my Apple TV that is connected to my router (when in router mode) can stream 4K content flawlessly even though Fast.com is showing throttled speeds.
I hope this clears up the question that I asked.
What 3rd party firmware for Asus ax86u be able to do that?
Thank you!
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What 3rd party firmware for Asus ax86u be able to do that?
Thank you!
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