Skip to main content

AT&T shuts down long-running text-to-email services

NA
NA

If you’re an AT&T customer, you’ve long been able to send and receive texts through email (even if you didn’t realize it.) The company now says it’s going to sunset this feature on June 17, 2025. That’s not necessarily bad news, however; as many users point out, text-to-email services can result in a surprising amount of spam messages making it through email filters.

The closure announcement came with little fanfare. Many people weren’t even aware AT&T was discontinuing the feature until Reddit user u/ben305 shared a post on the r/ATT subreddit. All AT&T’s official website says is, “On June 17, 2025, our email-to-text and text-to-email service is going away. This means you won’t be able to use email to send or receive texts. Also, others who have AT&T WirelessSM won’t be able to use email to send you a text or use text to send you an email.”

Recommended Videos

The service is also going away from any Cricket subscribers.

NA
NA

Though some Reddit users lamented the loss of the service, most took it in stride. User u/garylapointe said, “It doesn’t seem like it’s been working very well the past couple of years, so that’s probably a good thing.” On the other hand, user u/nothing_2_talk_about said, “I use this feature all the time! I have my email set to forward to text to alert me of safety alerts from the filtering software we use to monitor my students.”

Most other major carriers provide a similar service. Verizon still offers something along the same lines, although the company has since retired its email service. T-Mobile also allows customers to send texts to devices from email addresses by using the format “phonenumber@tmomail.net,” where “phonenumber” is replaced with the ten-digit number.

While once useful, most people have drifted away from text-to-email and vice-versa in recent years. Other services like Pushover have essentially replaced this feature, and they do so without the spam risk that has long become synonym with email-to-text.

Patrick Hearn
Patrick Hearn writes about smart home technology like Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, smart light bulbs, and more. If it's a…
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon XR platform will officially run on T-Mobile’s 5G network
Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G+ 695 480+ 680 5G 4G MOBILE PLATFORM.

T-Mobile announced on Tuesday morning that it's partnered with Qualcomm Technologies to exclusively provide the 5G connections for Qualcomm's new efforts in extended reality (XR). This includes the recently announced Snapdragon Spaces platform, an XR toolkit that's intended to make it easier for developers to pursue augmented-reality (AR) projects. That, in turn, is an effort to fuel new projects for Qualcomm's AR Glasses, which it hopes are the next big thing in the mobile space.

Qualcomm's vision here is that, via an always-on wearable -- whether that's an actual headset or simply a pair of lightweight goggles -- users can "automatically see and hear contextually important content" through a hands-free interface. Qualcomm has been talking this up since at least 2016, describing a mixed-reality HUD as the "natural evolution" from today's hands-on smartphone connectivity. Its other partners for the project include Niantic, which has its own recently announced metaverse-focused development program called Lightship, and Lenovo, which plans to move into the always-on AR space with its ThinkReality A3 glasses next year.

Read more
T-Mobile’s 5G home internet service is now finally official
t mobile 5g home internet.

T-Mobile is finally -- and officially -- getting into the home internet game. The company has been testing its home internet service for a while now, but now it's moving out of that phase and launching its service to the public.

According to T-Mobile, 30 million households are now eligible to sign up for the service, and 10 million of those households are in rural areas. Pricing on the service sits at $60 with auto pay or $65 without. There are no fees for equipment rental, and T-Mobile says that customers will install their own equipment -- which should be easier than cable-based internet services.

Read more
T-Mobile’s Home Office Internet service brings 5G to businesses nationwide
The T-Mobile logo on a smartphone.

T-Mobile is getting more serious about internet services beyond phones -- and it's all on the back of its nationwide 5G network. The company has announced a new wireless Home Office Internet service, and it's built specifically to "give remote employees the bandwidth and security needed to get work done."

The new product is one of three services that are bundled into what T-Mobile calls "T-Mobile WFX" and is for enterprise customers -- so it's not necessarily for those looking for a replacement to their wired home internet service just yet. People who sign up for the service will get a router that they can install themselves and that basically converts 5G or LTE signals to Wi-Fi for the surrounding area.

Read more