MLS fans, the best perk from T-Mobile has returned for the 2025 season. After taking off 2024, T-Mobile and Apple are bringing back the “MLS Season Pass On Us” promotion that gets you the entire MLS season through Apple TV for free.
T-Mobile partnered with SpaceX last year and launched a beta program for Starlink connectivity last December. However, the company originally only offered the option on Samsung phones. Now, this has been expanded to the iPhone as well.
T-Mobile is expanding its Starlink beta program. Now, some iPhone and Samsung Galaxy users can connect to SpaceX's satellites.
Apple is finally offering support for Starlink satellite service on iPhones, but only on T-Mobile, and access is still limited.
Starlink support appears to be a secret iOS 18.3 feature for iPhones, some of which now support satellite communication services from SpaceX — but only for users invited to join public beta testing of the service on US carrier T-Mobile. This supplements Apple’s existing satellite services supplier, Globalstar.
Apple is said to be in secret talks with SpaceX and T-Mobile to add Starlink support, boosting satellite connectivity for iPhone users.
After taking a break from the promotion last year, T-Mobile is once again giving away free MLS Season Pass access to “qualified T-Mobile and Metro by T-Mobile customers,” Apple has announced. You can redeem it “for a limited time” using the T-Mobile Life app starting on February 18th.
Just in time for the 30th season of Major League Soccer, T-Mobile and Metro by T-Mobile customers can enjoy MLS Season Pass on Apple TV on Us. MLS Season Pass features every live regular-season match,
Apple Inc. has been secretly working with SpaceX and T-Mobile US Inc. to add support for the Starlink network in its latest iPhone software, providing an alternative to the company’s in-house satellite-communication service.
Apple has been working with Starlink and T-Mobile in secret to get iPhones ready for expanded satellite connectivity, and the feature is now enabled with iOS 18.3 ahead of the full service launch.
T-Mobile wants customers on its low-tier plans to pay for using the Starlink-powered satellite texting down the line.