>>26102 I was actually about to post a thread asking about the plusnet deal. It all seems grand but the network uses EE which, last I heard, was a shower of shite for a decent signal. Has this changed since?
Yeah, I could go GiffGaff and be done with it but that extra £2.50 a month is awfully tempting...Every month I could buy myself something silly with that like googly eyes to pretend I live in a Disney movie, a new pencil case to be the raddest man on my street, temporary tattoos to tell ladies I'm bad with commitment.
EE have the biggest and fastest 4G network, because they have the combined network assets of T-mobile and Orange. It's always worth checking the coverage in your local area, which can be pot luck.
EE have the biggest and fastest 4G network, because they have the combined network assets of T-mobile and Orange. It's always worth checking the coverage in your local area, which can be pot luck.
Three offer unlimited data on many of their plans, and it seems legitimately unlimited as far as I have found. I pay 20 quid a month for mine. That's a rolling SIM only contract so you're not locked in, that might be decent for you? Otherwise their pay as you go SIM plan charges 1p per MB.
I'd suggest an O2 or Three pay-as-you-go SIM. The standard tariff on both is 1p/MB data, 2p texts and 3p/min calls. Your credit doesn't expire. If your broadband keels over or you go into hospital, you can buy a monthly add-on for more data and tether your laptop to your phone via Wifi. Three offer slightly better deals on the larger data add-ons. These tariffs are your best bet if you're normally a light user, but occasionally need to use loads of data.
The NHS is committed to providing free WiFi for hospital patients by the end of this year, although there's no guarantees on quality.