• Microsoft's Lumia 950 Windows 10 phone will available on November 20, AT&T says

Microsoft's Lumia 950 Windows 10 phone will available on November 20, AT&T says (Photo : Windows Central)

Microsoft Windows Lumia phone fans with AT&T service have only a couple of more days to wait for the new Lumia 950. AT&T says it will launch on Nov. 20, with service of AT&T on $600. The owners can pay the service either up to 30 monthly installments of $19.97 with an update options for 2 years, 24 monthly installments of $24.96 with update options of 18 months, or 12 installments of $29.95 with update options of one year. The cost of the device with a two-year contract is $150, however, this raises the cost of service by $15 to $25 every month, depends upon the size of your data plan.

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Now, AT&T is the main carrier supporting Windows 10 Mobile, yet the deal isn't actually selective. Microsoft hasn't launched a flagship Windows phone from mid 2014, and the last AT&T Windows phone was the Lumia 1520 from November 2013. While Microsoft most likely won't win back piece of the overall industry with the Lumia 950 and 950 XL, at any rate Windows diehards will have some first class handsets to browsed.

First thing, AT&T total cost of $600 for the Lumia 950 is $50 higher than what Microsoft reported in October. Microsoft has said that it will offer the Lumia 950 opened through its own site, so you could spare $50 by buying direct from the source.

In case if you're okay with a greater phone, the 5.7-inch Lumia 950 XL could be a superior deal than the 5.2-inch Lumia 950. The opened cost of the bigger phone will be $650, however temporarily Microsoft will toss in a free Display Dock, giving you a chance to connect the phone to an outer screen for use as a lightweight desktop PC. The dock's general cost is $99, so purchasing it with an opened Lumia 950 will cost the same as the Lumia 950 XL pack.

What's more, obviously, purchasing opened permits you to convey the lumia phone to T-Mobile rather than AT&T. With respect to Verizon and Sprint, both Lumias support the essential frequencies, however as Ars Technica notes, it creates the impression that the telephones won't work those bearers. Clients on those services will simply need to sit back and watch if Microsoft grows accessibility.