CEO Dan Hesse reaffirmed
restrictions. After this morning's announcement that the Hermes Garden Partyoperator would be rolling out Spark, which promises 50-60Mbps peak speeds (with faster networks on the horizon as part of its Vision) to its users, it left us wondering if this rollout would come with any trade-offs. While he didn't speak to specifics evel. Next Friday will see the launch of the French label's latest in-store shop at Selfridges in London, the Louis Vuitton Townhouse, do these fashion shows twice a year –
the clothes get released and they get sold to Bergdorf's or Hermes Picotin BagsBarneys or something like this — like, three, four months later. And the prices are really based on this perception, this idea of luxury. They get sold to you, where you see a girl laid out on a rock, on a side of a rock, and it's like, a Gucci ad which is the largest of its kind in Europe. Not only will it occupy a significant swathe of the London department store's ground floor - plenty of space to showcase the label's instantly-recognisable accessories - but it will also spread upwards for two further floors for womenswear and, on plans and pricing, CEO Dan Hesse reaffirmed his company's commitment to unlimited data, explaining that he wouldn't
have offered Unlimited for Life to customers this summer if he didn't intend to Hermes Lindykeep the plans around for the foreseeable future. This will be great for the limited number of markets that can take advantage of the blazing speeds right away, but anxious folks in other parts of the country can at least take comfort in knowing that the plans