I'm playing around with all three United States mobile carriers in my parents' neighborhood in central North Carolina.
Verizon and T-Mobile both do very well inside city limits, and are about neck and neck in this neighborhood in particular. Good, but not great.
AT&T, in the immediate neighborhood, is the worse performer in terms of signal and speed.
T-Mobile is faster than Verizon in some places, but drops out and doesn't exist at all in others where both AT&T and Verizon still work.
Timothy Wynn
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in reply to Timothy Wynn • • •@twynn There are a couple of different ways you can do it. You can either use a dual network configuration, where you get two numbers that are on the same plan, then you just switch depending on which is better if you just use the same two all the time. Especially easy when you use two eSIMs.
Or, you can do a network switch request, it takes a few minutes, usually 10 or so, you get a new eSIM, and that's that. Because I have two eSIMs on my phone, I have to delete one of them before I can install a new one, otherwise it would be a little faster.
basically, they are doing a port request on the back end every time you switch. Given that, it's pretty seamless.
Timothy Wynn
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