As for that second plan? It's called T-Mobile One Plus, and it really amounts to bundling all the previous add-ons into one more reasonable package. The $25 extra per line that you would have paid just for HD video now gets you unlimited HD passes (you have to turn it to always-on yourself, oddly enough), LTE hotspot data and twice-as-fast data roaming in over 140 countries.

Both the modified One plan and the new One Plus tier will launch on September 1st, or 5 days earlier than originally planned. Clearly, T-Mobile is feeling the heat from rivals who've stepped up their game -- all four major networks now have at least 'overage-free' plans, and Sprint's unlimited HD video plan is still less expensive than One Plus at $80 per month (albeit capped at 8Mbps for video and game streams). Not that we're about to object to T-Mobile changing its tune. The One Plus plan doesn't cap anything beyond the potential for throttling after 26GB, and those who stick to the base One plan are getting a much better deal before it's even available.