
What's The Best Cell Phone Calling Plan? 291
ChazeFroy asks: "I just got a new job that requires much travel throughout the United States, and this company is giving me $50 per month to put toward a cell phone bill. Although I found this discussion helpful, it didn't talk about cell phone calling plans. Things that are important to me are the company offering the plan, coverage (I will need nationwide coverage, most likely), number of minutes per month, the possibility of free incoming calls, and the price per month. What do you guys have, and what are your experiences?"Update: Wirefly offers a great tool these days to compare cell phone plans.
today (Score:1)
TECHNOLOGY!
I've been looking for this too. (Score:1)
Re:60K NYC (Score:1)
Reason for no free incoming calls (Score:1)
Simple. We have free outgoing calls. All outgoing local calls from land-lines are free in the States.
Yes, it sucks when it comes to mobile phones. We have no infrastructure for billing the land-line for local calls to mobile phones. The phone companies have to charge someone for the call. So they bill the mobile phone user.
This same thing also is the reason why the US has lead the world with adoption of the Internet. With free local calls, internet usage is cheap. Really cheap.
We pay for it with mobile phones, though. As a result, you often see mobile phone users treating their mobile phone as a pager. They don't answer incoming calls. If they want to talk to the person, and they recognize the incoming phone number, they pick up. If they don't, they check their messages and call back. It's an inconvenience. But it's the price we pay for free local phone calls.
What astounds me is that we don't have pay-as-you-go phones. These seem to me to be a fantastic marketing gimmick. They make it acceptable, for once, to give an 8 year old a mobile phone. Or a 70 year old.
Hmmm. Now that I think about it, is that such a good thing? Do we want our children's brains fried at such an early age?
Re:In the US, there are no good plans (Score:1)
Same topic, different question (Score:1)
You don't care about mobile phones in a strange country far far away?
So do I!
get the company to sort this out (Score:1)
Get them to sort the phone out for you. Then of you make any personal calls own up to them...
Anyway if the US is anything like the UK this whole things changes on a weekly basis as the different firms fight it out.
Re:Yes - unfortunately you do ! (Score:1)
wow.. (Score:1)
Re:Reason for no free incoming calls (Score:1)
http://www.ameritechwireless.com/sbc/promotions
Re:I've been looking for this too. (Score:1)
AT&T was great, until the promo-deal I signed up on ran out. (I think it included an insane number of weekend minutes.) After the deal ran out, though, you have to commit to another year given whatever their current best promo is.
After two years, I switched to Sprint and am quite happy. I still have a year contract (allowed me to add extra minutes to their base plan), but the deal you sign up under stays in effect until you cancel service. The deal I have is 200 anytime + 300 evening/weekend all with long distance for $39.99.
The criticism that Sprint coverage is weak out of the major cities is true
And, the little Samsung phones rock!
DC
Re:No good plan in the USA (Score:1)
I found that too expensive and now use a pay as you go phone. I kept my L7089 and just put a different card in it. They sent me the new card with the first £5 of calls for free as I was keeping my old number.
Audio quality, coverage, networks, voice mail (Score:1)
Likes: Excellent audio quality. Many people think I'm on a land line. The CDMA spec is newer than GSM, and they spec'd better codecs than older systems. Also, long battery life.
Dislikes: Customer service. They screwed up my multi-phone billing. Took forever to get it resolved. If customer service call centers are hellish jobs, it is karmic justice. If you go outside of cities and off the Interstates, the coverage sucks. This is due to PCS having lower power and shorter range than TDMA. Maybe good if you worry about nuking your brain. I use a headset anyway.
I have tried lots of types of systems, and this is how I rank audio quality:
1. CDMA (Sprint, in the U.S.)
2. PHS (Japan)
3. DoCoMo (Japan)
4. tie: GSM and TDMA
6. Nextel (U.S. only?)
7. Analog cellular
Some people I know use smaller cellular companies that operate regional networks for the big guys and have reciprocal agreements on roaming. Thse can be cheaper, but one effect I have seen is that I often get a "try again later" message, indicating the carrier's voice mail system is out of ports. That's one way to cheap out on infrastructure. Also, depending on your carrier, you might not get through to an idle phone if the carrier cheaps out on cell capacity in congested areas or peak drive time. But I have never seen any comsumer comparisons that measure the ratio of users to network capacity.
Re:Audio quality, coverage, networks, voice mail (Score:1)
Re:Audio quality, coverage, networks, voice mail (Score:1)
Gasoline (Score:1)
Try epinions.com (Score:1)
Try here: http://www.epinions.com/elec-Comm-Mobileservice-A
--
Steven Webb
System Administrator II - Juneau and TECOM projects
NCAR - Research Applications Program
best plan? (Score:1)
Re:GSM! (Score:1)
Could you explain why? I am curious as the GSM phones I have seen all sound horrid. My Verizon CDMA phone sounds so much like my landline phone that people ask me if I am still at home when I call them. Of course one could be better than the other in different areas. All I know is my verizon phone works most places I go. Here in Mobile, AL. New Orleans, LA. Houston, TX. Pensacola, FL. I will have to say my dual mode phone will not work in Atlanta, Memphis or Indianapolis. Though if I upgraded to a trimode phone it probably would work. My friend who uses Digiph GSM sounds all broken up if she goes traveling in any of these places. My phone still sounds clear though it occassionally echos in say houston 10% of the time. Nothing too bad though.
Re:Try Verizon Wireless -- NOT!! (Score:1)
Now that Airtouch is Verizon they suck big time.
I broke my phone (do not leave phone on top of car while driving) and had to put down a $250 deposit for a CRAPPY loaner phone (a single band AudioVox that was statick-y as hell) and it took them 3 weeks to give me a replacement phone. They had my exact model in a box new in the store, um trade me.
My other huge complaint is getting violated on roaming charges. Yah I live in the midwest, but I occasionally have to travel to the coasts and such. Please don't rape me when I'm there. Last time I traveled to San Francisco I rented a pre-paid phone and used it. Saved me like $200 in a week of calls.
My last complaint is their damn rude customer service people. My damn check got lost in the mail, was like two weeks late in getting there (stamps make envelope delivery faster) and they were majorly rude about it. I stopped payment on the lost check gave them a new one and THEY RAN THE STOPPED CHECK EVEN AFTER THEY SAID THEY WOULD NOT thus costing me like $125 in bank and Verizon charges, and adding the first black spot to my credit report. The Customer Service Reps were all very unhelpful and blatantly rude, accusing me of not wanting to pay. Airtouch service had always been great before Verizon got to them.
I hate Verizon and am switching to the other guy at the end of this billing cycle!
VERIZON SUCKS!
Re:OT: Data synch on Linux? (Score:1)
[tir.com]
http://www.tir.com/~sgifford/startalk/
It includes programs to write to/from the addressbook, and a detailed analysis of the protocol used to communicate with the phone.
I'd love to take a look at your script, and see how the Samsung phones are different from Motorola. Where can I find a copy?
Sprint PCS can get your laptop on the Internet (Score:1)
It's coverage is kinda spotty, but where it does work, I can plug it into the serial port on the back of my laptop with a cable from Motorola, and I can use it to connect to the Internet from anywhere. It's slow, but it's fine for reading email, or for downloading a document or program to work on during a delayed flight. Anybody know if other phones/services able to do this nowadays?
I also wrote a program that lets me manipulate its addressbook from my Linux machine, which keeps me from having to type letters on its terrible little keypad. (see StarTalk [tir.com])
Great website for this info (Score:1)
I have found that Get Connected [getconnected.com] has a huge database of plans, rates, calling areas, etc... Also, they index DSL, Long Distance, ISPs, cable/satellite TV, calling cards, just about any connectivity need. Pretty useful site.
Regards,
cell plan comparison website (Score:1)
Sprint or ATT (Score:1)
I've used both Sprint and ATT. Sprint has a longer history of No Roaming or Long Distance charges. With ATT you have to make a decision based on your calling patterns, so it is not as clear, but what you are looking for is available.
I've found that ATT phones work better in areas of high electrical interferance - like trade shows. Mine works seemlessly as I go into elevators. My boss says this is because of the cell frequency assigned to the carriers and was a factor in choosing ATT for our company.
Sprint phones have a nice benefit of setting their clocks from the local cell towers. This is nice for when you land someplace and don't know the time zone or are just disoriented from too much travel. I certainly used the feature to keep in sync with my surroundings.
You might also want to Googlize your question, there are web sites that comparison shop for you. My ex employer used one to find that yes, I had chosen well when selecting Sprint.
Re:Make sure that you do get a cell phone bill. (Score:1)
This might not be a problem if you're fairly consistent in how you use your phone, but if your usage varies widely from month to month, you could end up paying for expired time.
Re:Sprint: Caveat Emptor (Score:1)
Re:Spring PCS (Score:1)
I just got a Sprint PCS phone, 'cause I mostly stay in town and the promotions were good. If I were doing a lot of driving to small towns I'd still be with Alltel.
(Ok, I still am, but it's a fill-out-the-month thing.)
Re:GSM! (Score:1)
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SprintPCS poor coverage (Score:1)
I live in Boston near the Porter Square T stop. Amazingly enough the T stop is a pretty bad coverage hole. I have had my calls dropped driving along Rt. 95 & 93. Where I work 30 minutes North of Boston the coverage goes in and out. I have had people call me at 11AM and leave a message while I am at work; but I never get notified that I have voicemail until I drive 20 minutes South towards Boston. Often I'll only get the message right as I place a call (often to the friend asking why they never called).
I have friends who live outside Boston, in New York City, and Los Angeles who have similar coverage complaints.
Re:Spring PCS (Score:1)
Wait, the US Ceel Network still operates analog in some areas! Oh my God, thats almost so funny it's sad!
I thought the US was technologically advanced. From what i've read here so far, the entire US mobile phone market is a complete and utter farce. Pay for incoming calls? No pay-as-go or phone-in-a-box plans? Multiple phone standards? Analog networks? Ye Gods, it reads like the stone age of mobile technology.
Jep, you're correct.
In the Netherlands we have 5 GSM-providers with full coverage.
And of course I can call from almost everywhere in the world (with exception of the US and Canada).
GSM rules.
GSM is the most used mobile phone standard on the world.
I have a monthly subscription from BEN for Fl 30- (around $ 11,75).
I also get 100 minutes free (Fl 0,33 a minute).
Of course we only pay for outgoing call, not for incoming.
And it doesn't matter if you are calling somebody's else mobilephone or a normal telephone.
It doesn't even matter on which net the other phone is.
But well, the Netherlands was the last country where they introduced GSM.
Bulgary had a GSM half a year earlier (middle 1995).
Most eastern european country's have GSM.
So, when you're in Kharkov in the Ukrain you can use your GSM phone without any problem.
charged for incoming? (Score:1)
Re:No Anonimity (Score:1)
I've got some friends that work for them, and they're guessing that something like half the clientele is using it for purely criminal purposes.
Re:Ugh ? (Score:1)
Also, $60k/year in NYC is sort of borderline poverty.
no kidding! (Score:1)
Re:Europe (Re:Pay as You Go - it's in south africa (Score:1)
I'm getting slightly peeved at all the messages going "you have to pay for incoming cell phone calls?!" I think it seems truly odd that large portions of the technologically-advanced world have to pay to make local phone calls on a landline. US$55/month for phone service (in North Texas, USA) includes extended metro service, and I can call an area of about 250 square miles.
Anyway, back on topic: VoiceStream [voicestream.com] has GSM service in good portions of the US, and their phones are capable of roaming internationally. A friend of mine just got one, and she's never going back to SWBell. The coverage where she lives is excellent, and she's out in the Middle Of Nowhere(tm).
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GSM Thoughts (Score:1)
As another poster mentioned, the US has a different GSM frequency, so you either need one of the 'world phones' or you can rent a compatible phone when leaving the country. I've used both the Motorola L2000/L7089 and the Ericsson i888 World, both are good phones and work in the US and outside it (they are tri-band, supporting 900/1800/1900 Mhz). Someone mentioned a Nokia, but I think it only covers two of the bands, so I haven't looked into it very thorougly (although that should get you 90-95% of GSM countries.) If you don't want to spend a lot of money on a world phone ($200+), Omnipoint had (now Voicestream) a very reasonable rental plan for customers, about $30 for a month. Although rates went up a bit after the first month.
The question remains, travel only in the US? You probably need a analog phone at the minimum for maximum coverage. Digital is a little more expense and adds a bunch of handy features like messaging and caller id. If you don't have to travel to non-GSM cities or away from Metro areas then GSM is quite good, otherwise stick to Sprint/AT&T/Verizon.
Kevin
PS. I'm a Omnipoint/Voicestream GSM customer...
Sprint PCS (Score:1)
The good: No contract, 1000 long distance anytime minutes plus 1000 off-peak/weekend minutes for $84/mo. I'm in Southern California and also use it in Maui, Hawaii with great coverage in both areas, very few dropped calls.
The bad: No free/cheap equipment. Not every city is covered, but they do make dual-band phones so you can always roam if you have to. Roaming fees aren't too bad...
The ugly: Lousey equipment line. I have a Nokia 6185 that I've had since it came out and I drop it regularly, it's hard to say how much longer it's going to last. I want a new 6260 and they don't offer it. When my phone dies so will my loyalty to Sprint PCS unless they add Nokia back to their line.
I don't know much about how their equipment works, is there any way of buying equipment from another provider and using it with Sprint PCS? From what I understand their stuff is all proprietory, which of course sucks and this proves it.
So anyways I'm happy with them, I just wish they would offer Nokia again. I e-mailed them over the weekend regarding this issue but haven't heard back yet...
--SONET
Re:Reason for no free incoming calls (Score:1)
Re:Sprint: Caveat Emptor (Score:1)
No problem either with keylock : all the keys are protected by the phone itself: it closes just like a startac...
I used a startac in europe for about a year two years ago. I've always hated it, and will never buy one again. But then again, maybe they also improved their phone...
Maan
Great site for comparisons (Score:1)
They have a pretty cool site that let's you set different options and filters out the plans that don't match with your selection.
Good luck,
Maan
use point.com and compare for _your_ needs (Score:1)
http://www.point.com/default.asp [point.com]
also, your needs become dramtically different if you travel overseas frequently, but there's tons of good info in here for that too.
Washington Post had a comparison list (Score:2)
However, a few tips:
DO NOT GET SPRINT NOR VERISON'S SERVICE. Sprint is unresponsive with it's Internet service, which drags down everyplace else. Just don't get it. Period. Verison Wireless is still a hotbed since the Bell Alantic/GTE merger and the strike that followed. I don't know if you will be delayed a month to get service to your phone.
Other than that, AT&T and Cellular One are very competitive for individual users. Nextel is geared towards businesses.
--
WolfSkunks for a better Linux Kernel
$Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.keenspace.com";
Do your own research. (Score:2)
You have to do your own research. I had verizon, and hated it, but not for any obvious reason. They worked okay, except I lived on the edge of a digital/analog zone. My phone always went to the weak digital tower in the next town, and then didn't receive calls due to the weak signal. When in analog mode it would recive calls from the strong signal.
If you travel the nation, then no raoming is the way to go, but if you rarely travel the lack of minutes on those plans could be a problem. With voicestream I get 600 minutes, a similear priced national plan would give me about 300. (good luck finding that plan though, prices are always different between providers to make it harder to compare!) If you rarely travel, then it might be worth while to pay high roaming fees and hold your calls down when in those areas. My current phone covers 5 states (yeah, slivers into 3 of them), but most of my friends have the same plan, and we have discovered that while we travel right to the edge of the area regularly we rarely cross the line. (It just happens our favorite camping spot has service only on one side of camp, but that is good enough)
Every provider has a different plan, different in every way they can make it. They don't want to saying "X gives me 500 minutes for $35, while you chrage $40" They want you confused, maybe the $40 plan above has voice mail, and a better covereage area so it is worth it. Verizon and Att both have local, regional and national plans, with different pricing in each. Sprint has national only (but a poor coiverage area IMHO). Many local providors exist with local and regional plans. You might find an out state providor who gives you a better deal, and is local in your city even though your phone says roaming! (But you have to decide if giving your friends a long distance number to your cell phone is good or bad)
don't foget other featues. CallerID seems to be the norm with cell phones (in area!), but voice mail isn't even though it should be, at $10/month you might decide on a different plan anyway. Will you use wireless web? some people might, I'`ve never tried it. I have an option to get news clippings to my phone, I never tried it, but that might be important to you.
Bottom line: plans are intentionally confusing. Talk to people where you often travel to find out about local problems (and how long, since towers are upgraded everywhere but not all at once). Decide if you are going to travel enough that a national or regonal plan makes sense. (Too bad there are currently no international plans) Figgure out how much you use the phone, remembering to factor in the increased convience of having it. Only after doing the above should you look at plans.
Forget About Sprint (Score:2)
Also, watch out for the silver Motorola "Timeport" that Sprint sells through Office Depot and other stores. It is missing 800 MHz digital mode, which the black, non-Sprint version of the same Motorola "StarTAC" digital phone has enabled. So, on the black phone you have the option to do digital roaming and switch to a digital 800 MHz primary carrier, on the silver one you only get analog roaming.
Thanks
Bruce
Re:Sprint: - What's a stronger word than "suck"? (Score:2)
And that applies to Sprint. See my other comment about them.
Bruce
Try Verizon Wireless (Score:2)
They offer a Motorola Startac phone that's tri-band - it operates on 800MHz AMPS, 800MHz CDMA, and 1900MHz CDMA, which are all the various frequency bands they use nationwide (Verizon was formed from Bell Atlantic, GTE, PrimeCo, and AirTouch). The phone works quite well, and they have cheaper dual-band phones also.
Sprint PCS isn't bad if you're in a Sprint-served area, but you get brutally violated with huge roaming charges if you step outside their calling area. And the Sprint footprint is relatively small.
- -Josh Turiel
Re:Try Verizon Wireless (Score:2)
But the SingleRate National plan really is a no roaming or long-distance plan - the combined companies cover virtually the whole US in their footprint, and they don't charge you in the tiny areas where they use roaming agreements. The roaming just counts against your minute allowance. I'm not sure if the roaming service is analog or digital, though - I suspect it's usually analog (but still no extra $).
I can't stand Verizon the landline company, but I'm a raving fan of their cellular.
- -Josh Turiel
OT: Data synch on Linux? (Score:2)
-Eric
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Where do you live or travel? (Score:2)
Do you live and or plan to travel in a major metro area? Many calling plans are great until you get out of a large area then its mom-n-pop all the way. For example most cellular (or digital, for the purposes of this discussio we'll call everything cellular) build up are in major metro areas and along major interstate highways so if you live not near those you will have degraded service. The work around for that can be in some areas to prepurchase analog minutes instead of having to essentially roam at that time. One thing to remember though is that a dual band or even tri band phone will suck batteries as it attempts to switch in an out of digital and analog zones if you're in a marginal area that crosses both systems. Next, find out exactly what the up front charges are if you want any additional services. Have you noticed that you haven't heard much about mobile net from the carriers recently? That's because a) it doesn't work and b) they charge some obscene up front setup like $300 plus $5/minute. At least they do here in the Raleigh NC area. Next find out about bundled billing. If you want 2 phone numbers to share the minutes pool you will have 2 basic choices a) No and b) a large block of initial minutes with the corresponding large monthly nut. Sprint will do that for a 500 minute/month plan or higher. Next find out what kind of billing detail they can provide incase you have to provide that to your employer. Next what kind of phone rebate if any are they offering or is the really really great calling plan only available if you purchase a $400 phone. Is the phone replaceable per the contract or is it upgradeable? If the answer is yes probe deeper and find out what they mean by that. Some providers mean yes to mean that you can do whatever you want if you want to buy another phone and then pay some multi-hundred dollar switch over fee to move your phone number to another phone.And make sure that your phone is not Nextel because that is a closed system different from all others and you have to use a Nextel phone in a Nextel area which is why they appear to be offering such great deals. Next of course the usual carry over minutes, plan change options should be reviewed. Oh - yeah, check the online vs. calling a telemarketer rates and plan options, they are usually different and they almost never know about one another. Next check phone insurance and compare it to what you can get ANYWHERE else including your existing homeowners'. Carrier provided phone insurance is close to loan shark rates. Find out if battery replacement canbe included in the maintainance contract - a very few do this. Do you need prepurchased minutes. Some providers have flat rate prepurchased service that shuts off when you reach it. A good thing to have if you're using the phone only for business and the employer won't pay for overages. Can the service be combined with ANI, CallerID, Paging, voicemail and the like which actually are pretty good to have with a business phone. Do they support inbound and outbound faxing? Is that even important to you? Does the service have automatic firmware updates for the phones a-la Startac or do they expect you bring them the phone 6 times a year to upgrade the microcode. Will they give you a loaner if yours breaks. What is their fraud protection?
Re:Pay as You Go - it's in south africa ? (Score:2)
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Re:60K NYC (Score:2)
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Re:Ugh ? (Score:2)
Yep, that's exactly what I said. I'll spend all the money on trainfare and/or rent, I'll burn out from the 13-hour work days (if you include travel), and I'll be left with pretty much nothing. The only reason I considered taking it for $60K is because I could then get something better half a year later. But half a year is a really long time...
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Re:Nokia products... sorry but I must testify. (Score:2)
And don't even get me started on these flimsy condoms that are put out today... 'Course it give you more feel when tha goddamn thing's busted right when'sya puts it on!
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AT&T Digital One-Rate (Score:2)
For receiving calls, that's basically a freebie that some places like Cellular One give you for calls to/from other Cellular One network phones. You'd have to find out who you'd be calling a lot and get on the same network as them.
You could also skip the long-distance carrier and use phone cards. My phone can auto-dial a card number for long-distance calls.
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Re:Ugh ? (Score:2)
Well, here in the Philadelphia area, it's not uncommon to live in South Jersey and commute to the other side of Philly, Valley Forge/King of Prussia/Wayne/Malvern/etc. Those destinations are much closer in mileage, but take 60-90 minutes to drive to. No reasonable mass transit, and only one or two roads that go there. I'll take 30 min easy drive + 90 min of relaxing train ride over a frustrating 60-90 min drive.
I do agree, however, that $60k in NYC is terrible. If you're any good at your coding, you should be at least getting $80k+. Also, the better companies in the city will gladly pick up the tab for public transit.
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50 bucks ?? (Score:2)
What I can recommend is Fido (with the US equivalent being Omnis I think. At least that's what my Fido registers on when I cross the border.)
They're digital, they're Nokia's and I like it. You even have an analog module option. Just stick it under the battery, and you're in business. Other important thing: No roaming fee, and all your outgoing calls are local to the area you're in. You got an Alaskian phone, you're in NYC, dial an NYC number, and it's local.
Up here, you get 400 minutes for 40$ CDN, and if you dont use it all, it rolls over to the next month. They have pay-as-you-go, and also 200,300,400,600,700,800,1000 minutes plan.
'nuff said.
Re:Brain fry (Score:2)
There was an article (either here, or on BBC - I'm way too lazy to check) about a week ago claiming that the wire for the headset acts as an antenna, collecting and concentrating the radiation that the phone emits. And pumps it straight through your ear into your brain.
Of course, this could result in a better world, one where all the morons that walk around hotel and convention center lobbies yelling at nobody have died of deep fried brain cells....
Then again, there is always bluetooth...
point.com (Score:2)
Just recently, I needed a mobile phone that would allow me to not get reemed on long distance/roaming charges in the Midwest. My mobile service is now through Verizon. Yes, I know verizon sucks [verizonsucks.com] but they had the best deal for my needs. :P
I used the website www.point.com [point.com] to get educated on the current state of mobile phone technology and to price out plans/phones for North America. I recommend this website for getting an idea of what is out there.
Europe (Re:Pay as You Go - it's in south africa ?) (Score:2)
Here in Finland the prepaid cards are not as popular however.. it costs about 3 times more than in a normal contract (42 vs 14 cents, respectively) and I haven't seen a *real* person with such a card for lo-ong time now.
Not to mention that roaming in Europe is something you don't even need to know about - it just works. (don't go roaming to Russia, though - the prices are astronomic, I hear. One of the most expensive networks in the world, they say).
There is still one analog network in Scandinavia (NMT450) which is used mostly in less-populated areas (such as Lapland) due to its vast coverage (it's safe to say that you can still make a call from any point in Finland, however remote it is) but the analog network is being replaced by digital one. It's just as well 'cause it covers all the cities and roads and where else could you be? Analog cell phones are rare, expensive and hard to come by, there's really no reason to buy one, unless you're a hunter or something of a type.
Oh, that sure helped to answer the original question? Good. :-)
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Re:Spring PCS (Score:2)
I don't know where you people get the idea that we don't have this. There's several really cheap phone-in-a-box plans -- I saw one for sale in a video rental store, $20 for the phone, I forget how much for minutes. Of course, the coverage area is pretty bad. I went with the AT&T Prepaid plan, which has nationwide coverage, and a Nokia (6100?) phone, works with both digital and analog, and the prepaid plan is nationwide -- no roaming charges. I think it works out to around 45c/minute.
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Re:Move to Australia! (Score:2)
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Re:GSM phones from Europe in the US. (Score:2)
The conflict in frequencies is a little bit unfortunate. There's not too much that can be done about it however, 800 and 1900 MHz are the bands that have been set aside for mobile phones in the US, and I do believe that these were set aside before Europe made the 900, 1800 MHz standard. If you know that you will be traveling between the US and Europe (and non-Japan Asia, Japan is a whole different can of worms) then you get the phone that supports it.
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Re:Try Verizon Wireless (Score:2)
My recommendation would be to go with a regional TDMA provider. In my area (Cedar Rapids, IA) it's US Cellular. I pay $25/month for 200 minutes with free longdistance. I can roam to 11 midwestern states without paying extra and if I wanted I could pay an extra $5/month and be able to roam anywhere in the country for free. Another big bonus is that they don't charge me for roaming if I'm making an analong tower. All you euro-snobs can make fun of me all you like, but when I've got a weak signal (remote location, in a steel building, tunnel, etc.) my Ericsson T18d switches right over to AMPS mode and keeps working. With analog you may have to shout over static, but at least you can hear something. So make sure that you get a tri-mode phone, then you really can cover the whole country.
The last big advantage of getting a national calling plan from a regional TDMA carrier is that AT&T uses TDMA so you are gauranteed good coverage in all the big cities that AT&T serves.
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Re:Move to Australia! (Score:2)
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Re:The future's bright, the future's... (Score:2)
I'll try to inject a little truth here. If you come to the US with your GSM phone. It will work. At least in urban areas (Not just the big cities, my city has only about 100 kilopeople and we have GSM). As of right now GSM probably isn't the best choice for someone who does not plan to travel internationally very often. Most of the rural areas are served better by the TDMA digital system. That's right! We do have digital coverage pretty much everywhere.
We also have analog coverage still in place pretty much everywhere. I see this as a feature not a bug. Analog service performs much better in a weak signal situation. With an analog phone with a weak signal you get static. That's ok, you just have to yell. With a digital phone with a weak signal you get silence. You can yell all you like but you still can't communicate.
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Re:Relative sizes (Score:2)
I seriously doubt you'll see AMPS die off in the US for another 20 years. The thing that will eventually kill AMPS will be the lack of data services on IS-54, and that won't become important to the masses for another 10 years.
Re:GSM! (Score:2)
Re:GSM! (Score:2)
Re:Ugh ? (Score:2)
Re:A few questions and a recommendation (Score:2)
paying for incoming calls in Europe (Score:2)
- You have, say, a Dutch phone and contract
- You go to, say, Belgium
- You receive a call from Holland.
You pay for the communication from Holland to Belgium.
Re:Sprint: Caveat Emptor (Score:2)
Personally, I just turn my cell off (I have a StarTac, too) when I'm in a meeting, or at the movies, and then I turn it on when I'm done. I figure if I'm not even going to answer the call, or pop open the phone to see who it's from, I don't even need to know that I am getting a call, or at least not at that moment.
Re:Can't recommend a plan... (Score:2)
Coming Soon on Slashdot (Score:2)
"What's the most energy efficient washing machine?"
"How do I stop my meringues from flopping?"
"Which is car suffers the least in depreciation costs?"
"Who gives the most flexible mortgage?"
"Why is that man in the ski mask trying to break down my door?"
Re:Forget About Sprint (Score:2)
That's about right. I don't even have usable Sprint PCS coverage at my house, in Silicon Valley a mile from US 101 and a mile from downtown Palo Alto. I have to go outside on the deck and get line of sight to the downtown Palo Alto cell site to get it to work.
There are annoying gaps in Sprint PCS coverage in places you'd least expect it, like Hollywood and the Stanford campus. Don't expect to use a Sprint PCS phone indoors unless you're near a window facing one of their cell sites.
It always amuses me that Sprint PCS has a faint background hiss. The system is totally digital, so the hiss must be deliberately inserted to mask quantization error.
Re:Brain fry (Score:2)
Last time i checked a radio was a receiver, not a microwave transmitter.
Spring PCS (Score:2)
Re:AT&T Digital One-Rate (Score:2)
The folks with AT&T service ended up sharing their phones a lot, since they had the only ones which worked just about everywhere. So I got an AT&T Digital One-Rate plan myself -- with my usage level (close to 800 minutes/month) it works out to a bit over 12 cents a minute, which is not much more than what my landline costs once all the standard monthly costs are added in.
I've never seen anything that can beat it, if getting the call through is your primary concern... and it really doesn't cost that much, either.
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Re:Pay as You Go (Score:2)
Wrong (Score:2)
My story: I used to pay, and expense, roaming charges for business. Now I have national roaming, and though I haven't figured out how to expense a single call, nonetheless my net expense is much less.
Re:Sprint: Caveat Emptor (Score:2)
That's the reason I took the first phone back. It kept hanging up on me. Eventually, it kept turning off unexpectedly. It was completely annoying. After my second phone, I told them I didn't want the same model. I guess the salesperson could see in my eyes, that I was out for blood. She immediately got her manager. He of course, gave me the StarTac. So far, I have no problems with it.
You might try taking it back, next time it hoses out, and telling them you want another model. If they say they won't give you one (a highly unlikely scenerio), just tell them you'll cancel their service. They're the ones pooching the deal by not giving you a decent phone.
cell phones.... eeck. (Score:2)
Cell phone service here can be useful for me because some have their local calling area extended from North East PA to State college, so I don't end up paying the big roaming charge fee when I'm making calls from there. However, outside of NEPA and State college, the roaming fees pile up very quickly. Your $50 will vanish :(
Re:GSM! (Score:2)
Del
Nokia products... sorry but I must testify. (Score:2)
Re:Ugh ? (Score:3)
You'd be surprised... Lots of people commute daily from Philly to NYC. If you're just coding, chances are your employer would likely be agreeable to telecommuting 2 or 3 days a week.
I live in South Jersey (Burlington County), and from August, 1998 - December, 1998 (as part of a contract) I commuted daily from my home to NYC (2 WTC). My days went something like this:
The reverse trip was easy too. Back on the PATH about 5:00, catch the 5:30ish train from Newark back to Trenton. Home before 7 every night.
Oh, by the way, the 50 minute train rides make for great naps. There are also AC outlets if you need to get work done.
Cost? Work was picking up the tab, but here's what it ran me:
The NJT weekly && monthly passes permit you to ride the Amtrak unreserved trains between certain hours at no extra charge. Nicer trains, more comfy seats too.
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Re:GSM all the way (Score:3)
You're close.
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Don't fall for the 100% all digital hype (Score:3)
A large portion (square miles wise) of the country is only reachable on 800 AMPS analog service. If you stick to cities all the time, no problem. But if you're driving between Phoenix and Las Vegas and need to make a call, you'll be real grateful for that analog signal you have.
So when you see an advertisement for "all digital" what they are saying is "no analog" and in my mind, that's a real problem.
Personally, I'm with Verizon Wireless and with their national plan, the tri-band phones update themselves with current roaming tables so they always pick the correct band or if on analog, the correct side (A or B) and there are no extra charges for calls all over the country. You get CDMA digital calls where available and if not, you'll calls will be delivered or sent over an analog network. Analog is better than nothing...
Re:Where do you live or travel? (Score:3)
This is a really good point. I had to use mine last month and it really saved me a lot of money. I bought my phone from Worst Buy(tm). They charged me $60 for the 3 year protection plan (better coverage than the $3-4/month plan that US Cell offers) and gave me a $50 gift certificate (worked well since I also needed a new microwave). Last month I dropped my phone onto the sidewalk. It landed on it's antenna and broke it off. I walked into Best Buy, told them what happened and kind of waved my service agreement at the kid behind the counter. He didn't ask me any questions or give me the third degree or anything. He just reached under the counter grabbed a box and said "Is this color OK?" Even threw in a brand new battery. 10 minutes later he had the phone programmed for me and I was out the door. This is by far the most impressed that I have ever been with a warranty repair/return. I was really surprised to find it coming from Best Buy.
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Re:GSM! (Score:3)
Pay as You Go - it's in south africa ? (Score:3)
For about $20 you get a starter kit that gets installed in your cellphone at the shop you buy it from and comes with your PIN number and your Cell Number.
After that, you buy 'recharge' vouchers of several different denominations - i.e. call time.
These vouchers have a serial number which you reveal in the same manner as a scratch card - you then simply dial a number and punch in the serial - viola, more call time !
All incoming calls are free.
IOW, you call the shots on how much bucks you want to spend.
This system is only useful if you receive more incoming calls than you make outgoing.
I can't believe there's nothing like that in the states ? -
Hmm, come to think of it, I think it was invented in South Africa - check it out
http://www.vodacom.co.za
http://www.mtn.co.za
Relative sizes (Score:3)
Sprint: Caveat Emptor (Score:3)
Don't get the Samsung SCH-3500 model. No matter how hard they try to sell you. I've had two of these models quit on me. I finally traded it in for a StarTac and not only can you hear better on them, but they have better glow in the dark readout. And, by the way, are more compact.
If you put the phone on vibrate, so that you don't disturb anyone, such as in a business meeting or movie theatre, the phone will vibrate when you get a call, but then will RING to let you know you have missed a call. When I called Sprint about this poor design they said there is nothing they can do about it. Samsung designed the software and the hardware. When I called Samsung, they said there was nothing they could do. I would have loved to be in the design phase meetings when they made this phone.
The phone also has a keylock function. When this feature is activated, the keys won't respond, until you turn it off. This is in case you have the phone in your pocket, or where ever and you don't want to accidently dial people. The problem is, all the keys are locked behind the hard flip-top cover. All they keys, except for two. One of these non-protected keys is the OK key. Guess what it does. It turns off the key-protect feature. Guess what the other one does. It dials your voice mail (for which you get dinged for minutes). Oh, did I mention the keys on the side of the phone? They are a quick-features key. One of these gets you to the main menu where you can do all kinds of dialing damage - again, getting dinged for cell-phone minutes. Just another example of ingenuity in action.
On the plus side, the voice activated dial worked really well. The only problem is, I used it more to impress chicks, than I did for its functionality. The problems with the phone far outweigh this one little plus.
My rating: 1 out of 4 stars.
Make sure that you do get a cell phone bill. (Score:3)
So far, AT&T and TRACFONE have tried this; AT&T recently shut down their program. Sprint is just starting theirs; endcap displays have arrived at many stores already (including my CompUSA).
Just a caveat: when purchasing a cell phone, get a bill. For an idea of what it's like to run out of cell phone time, type this into your Q3 console:
useful link (Score:4)
go to the consumer section then click on "Service Plan Locator". They cover a few good SPs.
The prices differ a bit, but you should have a rough idea on how much you will use your cell phone...a good start is to check you current/past cell phone bill and work it out from there.
Good luck.
Re:Ugh ? (Score:5)
My own story: Some company in NYC offered me a job for PHP/MySQL/misc. programming. After pulling the price back and forth for a while, we ended up at $60K with some benefits, with them starting at 50, and me starting at 80; A compromise which definitely ended on their side of the line. I live in Philadelphia, so traveling is not really an option. I would have to relocate. I explained this difficulty to the recruiter. He offered to lend me $5K for moving expenses, which would then be deducted from my salary.
I'm not one to kill someone for a few dollars, but if a company declined to even offer me moving expenses, I doubt that they will be very kind in the future. For better or for worse, I declined.
Posted with a recent Mozilla nightly, BTW. Just get the UI bugs out, and I'll use it guys. :)
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Ugh ? (Score:5)
Can't recommend a plan... (Score:5)
Effectively cellphones are little more than pocket radios, and despite US radio scanners having the cell frequencies "blocked" (IE, the scanners skip the bands assigned to cellphones), you can still pick them up on blocked scanners due to "imaging" (Check Strong Signals [strongsignals.com] and check their glossary about imaging.)
So if you want to be entirely secure, and what good Slashdotter doesn't, avoid analogue phones like the plague, or if you have no choice, at least treat them as being as secure as shouting across a crowded room.
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A few questions and a recommendation (Score:5)
GSM all the way (Score:5)
1) First of all, it's a world standard, and you know how we love standards here at Slashdot. Nonstandard networks include AT&T or Verizon (a bizzare TDMA hack) and Sprint PCS, which is a new system entirely (although they get kudos for doing something new, CDMA). In fact, there is no central corporation with GSM, only an alliance of providers and manufacturers which decide on the standards.
2) GSM isn't a just digital radio transmission protocol like TDMA or CDMA. It's quite unfair to compare "the big three" as GSM, TDMA, and CDMA. That makes no sense at all. Heck, GSM uses TDMA for its radio transmission. In reality, GSM is an entire cellular phone system, from the phones you use, to the radio towers, the whole bit. Everything about it is part of the standard.
3) GSM was built with wireless data in mind, which is why it has always supported voice, data, and SMS (short messaging service, two way paging) in its network. Every other USA service is just now catching up (read: hacking it in).
4) GSM separates owner and phone by utilizing a SIM card, which identifies you and your provider. This means that you don't even have to notify your provider when you buy a new phone. Just pop in the chip and off you go. I have several GSM phones, and I just stick the chip in the one I wish to use that day. Hmm, do I want the sweet Nokia 8890? Or the terminal-in-my-pocket Nokia 9000 [nokia9000.com]?
By the way, amidst the fragmented USA cellular phone market as it is, 1900MHz was assigned as the GSM frequency. This means that for a GSM phone to work here, it must support that frequency. However, some phones do both. The Nokia 8890 or the Ericsson i888 work just about everywhere in the world. And they both have IR ports for your laptops/Psions/Palms. Fun stuff indeed.
When you decide to go with GSM (and I'm sure you will), be sure to choose Powertel. From my research, they have the best value for data minutes in the USA. 600 minutes of voice (or data, no extra charge) anywhere in the USA to anywhere in the USA for $65/mo. Not bad! =)
-Justin