USA local SIM card
J. Hellenthal
jhellenthal at dataix.net
Sun Sep 17 17:43:44 UTC 2017
Ting isn’t too bad either for pricing but can’t speak to service quality but we have a few people that use them and haven’t heard much complaints.
https://ting.com/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMInKW-mOKs1gIVglqGCh2CvQcDEAAYASAAEgLVSPD_BwE
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Onward!,
Jason Hellenthal,
Systems & Network Admin,
Mobile: 0x9CA0BD58,
JJH48-ARIN
On Sep 17, 2017, at 12:15, Brielle Bruns <bruns at 2mbit.com> wrote:
> On 9/17/2017 11:07 AM, Max Tulyev wrote:
> Hi All,
> sorry for possible off-topic, I really did not know where to ask this.
> I'm going to visit USA for two weeks. I want to buy a local prepaid SIM
> card mostly for IP access.
> Is it possible in USA to buy a prepaid SIM as a visitor, without long
> term contract?
> I need a public (can be dynamic) IP address, NOT over NAT, and (or)
> IPv6, if possible.
> My phone is GSM UMTS 3G.
> Expected traffic volume is about 10G.
> Will use it in New York City and Orlando City, not in rural areas.
> Good data roaming tariff in Cannada will be a big advantage.
> What can you advice?
> Thank you!
Walmart has the prepaid no contract Straight Talk plans that can be on VZW, T-Mobile, or AT&T. Grab a BYOD kit either from a Walmart store or order online.
I keep a mobile hotspot deactivated and ready to add a service plan to for my customers if they have an outage.
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Brielle Bruns
The Summit Open Source Development Group
http://www.sosdg.org / http://www.ahbl.org
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