However, his most important message is that Sprint and other carriers want to work first with existing structures.
The carriers mostly want to keep things the same so there's little incentive to move elsewhere.
But for some reason the carriers want us to install a whole secondary set of radios.
Why would carriers want the prices of phones to be high?
"If there's a dropped call, the carriers want to know about it," he said.
Moreover, consumers are generally stuck with only the services that big carriers want to offer.
First, the carriers want routes to destinations popular with Americans.
If a carrier wants to stop an update they can.
Both carriers want their creditors to allow them to continue flying.
The only conclusion I've been able to come up with is that the carriers want you to go over your allotment.