Michael D. Barlow on Mon, 1 Jul 2002 19:04:14 -0400


[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: [PLUG] Through cell phone to Internet - perpetual mobile contract


At the risk of beating the dead horse. You definitely need to upgrade the phone. go for a cdm 9100 or above or any of the motorola ones. LG also supports data. Do not get any of the nokia cheapies. None of them are data capable. Through verizon, These will get you about 14.4. The cables are about 60 dollars. If you decide to go that route, www.teledaptusa.com sells a myriad of cables. www.markspace.com also sells a few. Essentially the phone becomes a serial wireless modem. Hit the plug for more info if it is worth it to you with a new phone. There is quite a bit of info out there. I browsed most of it when I was looking for handspring visor connectivity.
At 02:09 PM 7/1/02 -0400, you wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

On Sunday 30 June 2002 22H:42, kaze wrote:
> Watch out, I have Cingular, and whenever you change or tweak your plan they
> restart the one year contract. I actually read the whole contract when I
> got it, but this was one of those additions they made later and sent with
> some junk mail. When I said I never agreed to renewing the contract they
> said that under PA law they could use my verbal agreement to the plan
> changes over the phone as contractually obligating. Also I believe for me
> to get out of it I have to notify them in writing just before the one year
> anniversary, then stop using the phone - otherwise it automatically renews
> for another year. Another frustrating thing is that not only can't you move
> numbers between networks, you can't always move perfectly good phones
> either.
>

I used to have Bell Atlantic Mobile / Verizon Wireless ANALOG service. I was
with them for probably about 5-6 years. I had switched to a lower rate plan
for the first time about 7 months prior to switching to another provider,
with no indication of an early termination fee. They tried to nail me with a
$175 cancellation fee. They even sent a collection agency, despite a
manager's assurance that I was correct, and should not have been charged an
early termination fee (whose name I had even written down :). It took about
12 phone calls over 4 months to clear that all up. Can't say I'd ever use
Verizon again in my lifetime. And, it was definitely NOT worth the hastle,
but $175 seemed like a lot before the saga started.

I now use Voicestream (was Omnipoint - liked it much better then, maybe paid a
dollar or two more a month, but got much better service). Have an Ericsson
GSM World Phone with an IRDA connector. It's basically a 9600 bps data
connection. Haven't been able to get coverage for the "World Phone" on
several trips, including a Carribean Cruise (not a big deal, avoided some
work-related activity) and Cincinatti, Ohio (more of a problem, my brother
lives there), but it does work in Fulton (and St. Louis), Missouri as well as
Chicago, IL (plus where I've been in FL, CA, NY, PA, DE, MD, NJ, etc.). I
have to check the coverage when we're in Great Britain later this year, but
if it doesn't work, I won't be terribly upset. Basically, a local GSM
provider is not always available in a number of U.S. locations as well as
U.S. territories and a few other parts of the world. At least my battery
lasts longer...


Oh, and my Ericsson plays OK with most IRDA implementations (Win98, WinCE,
Linux, etc.), but not Windows 2000. Ericsson released a firmware "upgrade" to
make the phone work better with Win 2K (because M$ wouldn't fix their
problem), but it is only allowed to be done by the service provider. But, the
service provider does not have the the right Windows OS installed (the
software only runs under Win 98/ME or Win 2K/ME, I forget which, but they
only have the other one). And, good luck trying to discuss this with any of
the "service" (no, they are "sales") people who work in the stores or answer
the phone. I spent months trying to get that working (that was probably about
1.5 years ago now). One more reason to use Free / Open Source Operating
Systems...

What really bugs me is that you get much better prices and service by
switching providers than you could possibly get from staying with the same
provider. My wife wanted a new phone and had to go through all kinds of hoops
to get close (but still higher) to the price a new customer would get on the
same new Samsung phone. She just likes that it's small and has a handsfree
accessory. Those were her only requirements. We even told them that that we
would SIGN a new 1-year contract, just wanted to keep the same phone #. It's
not on her business cards or anything, she just wanted to avoid giving out a
new # to friends, family, etc.

Sorry for the lengthy rant, but the people who run most mobile phone companies
can be extremely irritating. And, as others have pointed out, things don't
seem to be looking any brighter. Longer contracts, etc....


> I plan to go to Working Assets wireless in 2 months when this contract with
> Cingular has a non-fee escape window.
>

Good luck,
Jason Nocks
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux)
Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org

iEYEARECAAYFAj0gmvkACgkQ3CryLfCgqRk+bgCcDMN9YgTTG9QQuGBGWgQYL9GD
074An1TelSjbJTg7syTqiIMAnVnZpAVp
=IOMy
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----


______________________________________________________________________ Philadelphia Linux Users Group - http://www.phillylinux.org Announcements-http://lists.phillylinux.org/mail/listinfo/plug-announce General Discussion - http://lists.phillylinux.org/mail/listinfo/plug


______________________________________________________________________
Philadelphia Linux Users Group       -      http://www.phillylinux.org
Announcements-http://lists.phillylinux.org/mail/listinfo/plug-announce
General Discussion  -  http://lists.phillylinux.org/mail/listinfo/plug