Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
T-Mobile US Inc., 140M subscribers Sept 2025 (#2 US carrier), Q4 2024: 903K postpaid phone net adds (industry leader), Q2 2025: $17.4B service revenue (+6%), $3.2B net income (+10%), $2.84 EPS (+14%), 5G: 98% Americans covered, 300M+ high-capacity 5G, 2.5 GHz spectrum from Sprint merger, $8B run-rate synergies, targeting 12M 5G broadband by 2028
T-Mobile is the second-largest wireless carrier in the United States, founded in 1994 and headquartered in Bellevue, Washington. The company transformed its competitive position through the "Un-carrier" strategy launched under CEO John Legere in 2013, dismantling the industry's most frustrating practices — two-year contracts, data throttling, international roaming fees — and forcing the broader industry to follow. T-Mobile's core technology advantage is its nationwide 5G network, which it built faster and more broadly than AT&T and Verizon by leveraging mid-band spectrum acquired through its 2020 merger with Sprint.\n\nT-Mobile serves consumers, businesses, and enterprise customers across its namesake T-Mobile brand and prepaid brands Metro by T-Mobile and Mint Mobile (acquired 2023). Its 5G network covers 300 million+ people with the industry's most extensive mid-band coverage, delivering the combination of broad reach and fast speeds that defines 5G's practical value for consumers and businesses. T-Mobile has been the industry's consistent leader in postpaid net customer additions, a key indicator of competitive health in a near-saturated wireless market.\n\nT-Mobile reached 140 million subscribers in September 2025 and led the industry with 903,000 postpaid phone net adds in Q4 2024, generating $17.4B in service revenue in Q2 2025. The company has expanded beyond core wireless into home broadband (T-Mobile Home Internet), now one of the fastest-growing broadband providers in the US, and enterprise 5G services. As the wireless market matures, T-Mobile's combination of network leadership, disruptive pricing culture, and broadband expansion positions it as the most offensively positioned of the three major US carriers.
Dominant browser-based collaborative UI design platform at ~$600M ARR and $12.5B valuation; Adobe's $20B acquisition blocked by regulators in 2023, Figma remains independent competing with Sketch and Adobe.
Figma is a San Francisco-based collaborative web-based product design platform that has become the dominant tool for UI/UX designers and product teams — enabling real-time multi-user collaboration on interface design, prototyping, and design system management directly in the browser without installing desktop software. Founded in 2012 by Dylan Field and Evan Wallace and backed by Sequoia, Greylock, and Andreessen Horowitz with over $330 million raised, Figma generated approximately $600 million in ARR in 2023, serving 4 million+ designers and product teams at companies including Microsoft, Airbnb, Twitter, and Uber. Adobe announced a $20 billion acquisition offer in 2022, which was blocked by regulators in 2023 — Figma remains independent.
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