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Post By jep28
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Googles Project Fi
Google brings Project Fi data service to iPads, Nexus and Galaxy tablets
Want to add a tablet to your Project Fi account and pay for only the data you use? Google is offering SIM cards to just that, and not only for Android slates.
Google's pay-for-what-you-use Project Fi phone service has a new trick and a new SIM card: One for adding data to tablets.
New Project Fi SIM cards will soon be available for an initial five tablets although Google says that any slate equipped with a radio compatible with T-Mobile's network may work.
The first four officially supported tablets are the iPad Air 2, iPad mini 4, Nexus 7, Nexus 9 and Galaxy Tab S.
Project Fi customers can order a data-only SIM card through their account page:
There's no charge for the SIM card and data usage is billed at Project Fi's standard rate, which is $10 per GB of usage during a billing cycle.
Data usage for tablets shares the same billing account as a standard voice, text and data plan under Project Fi, although you can see how much data your tablet has used in month separately from the data on your phone. And like the phone service, if you don't use your full data allotment on your tablet, you won't pay for it.
Google credits Project Fi accounts monthly so you're only paying for what you actually use.
I wouldn't suggest that data at $10 a month is the best deal available, of course. Our AT&T family plan includes 15 GB of shared LTE data, for example and even though adding a tablet to that plan costs $10, I can use more than 1 GB per month out of the shared poll.
Still, some Project Fi users may appreciate the data-only SIM card offering. They could certainly use their handset with a Project Fi SIM card to tether a tablet over Wi-Fi but if their phone battery dies, their tablet has no mobile broadband connection. Road warriors may appreciate the new SIM card as well since it provides data in more than 120 countries around the world.
There are some small limitations with Project Fi data service, however. Google only allows 9 data-specific SIM cards per Fi account; not likely an issue since we're not yet carrying 10 devices with us. (Frankly, I hope that never happens.)
And setup isn't quite seamless. Regardless of whether you have an Android or iOS tablet, you'll have to tweak the device's APN settings so that the SIM card and Fi network is recognizable.
Note too that while Project Fi's phone service bounces between T-Mobile and Sprint networks, the data offering for tablets will only use T-Mobile's service. You're not getting the redundancy of a second network like you do for phones with Project Fi.
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