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| Fri, 12 May 2006 |
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I'm a late bloomer when it comes to cell phones. I've never really needed or wanted one. I tend to enjoy being away from the world when I'm eating out for dinner, for example. Yeah, I guess I can turn off the phone. But afterwards, I'd immediatly turn it back on, and want to deal with any messages there. If I *can't* check messages or email, I tend not to care... if I know one is there, or have the ability to check them, it bothers me until I do :-) Alas, for various reasons, I'm giving in, some of the reasons being:
So, I've begun poking my head around the various offerings. I've been learning about things like GSM and CDMA. Apparently, CDMA allows for more users on a single tower, and has a broader range per tower. But, GSM is more popular internationally, and claims a higher digital voice quality. Then there's all the providers... Verizon and Spring use CDMA. Verizon has a large presence in the North-East, where I spent most of my time. Cingular and T-Mobile, using GSM, do have coverage as well. T-Mobile tends to be more-so near highways, but otherwise, often considered to be rather poor coverage. Cingular seems to have an even network around the US... maybe not as good in the North East as Verizon, but better in other areas. It gets tough though, as you can run into pockets of people who will suggest any of the above. Some people love Verizons network and connectivity. Others love Cingular for the same reason. Some like TMobile because it works well enough, but is cheaper.... especially when including data into the plan. The thing that gets me with all this is cost... it kills me that I'll end up spending so much to be able to have a phone that allows me to connect to the Net in the case of an emergency. We'll probably get a phone for Shana at the same time... so, for the both of us, family plans tend to start at $60/month. Data, for one user, is at least another $20. So, we're suddenly spending $80/month. And then there's at least another $5-$10 in taxes. Yay! So, we're almost at $100 for two people to carry around phones, one of whom can use it to get on the Net for a brief period of time. Ugh! Anyhow... the next issue at hand is in choosing a phone. There's a ton of them out there. And if you look at say, the CNet reviews, you can find at least 5 things wrong with each one, and an additional 2-3 if you read what the users have to say in addition to the actual review. So, what level of imperfection are you willing to tolerate in order to gain the privilage of spending $100 a month to be able to have people interrupt you during dinner? Well, in any case, if I'm going to be doing Internet work, it's going to be over ssh. And with ssh, a keyboard is nice. The Treo's and such are tempting, but they're quite large, and they run Windows. I was really just considering dealing with one of the standard LG phones, or perhaps a flipout keyboardthat the LG-9800 offers. With it, you can use the free BitPim to upload wallpapers and ringtones, modify the filesystem, and other goodies that seem to come disabled (so not only am I spending $100 on phones, I'm spending that much on phones with features taken out!). But, in poking around the Net, I ran across this rather cool looking Nokia, the E70. It sports not just a keyboard, but over 7 hours of talk time, WiFi access (b, g, e, and i), a 2MB camera, a 352 x 416 screen with 16 million colors, 75MB of space and a mini-sd card slot, and it supports Java so I should have no trouble getting my ssh client. After all is said and done, it seems like a winner of a phone. I'm leaning towards going with Cingular... as Tmobile doesn't really seem to be cheaper, you just get more features for your money (ie, it's still $60 for a family plan, but you get 700 minutes, instead of 550). So, I'm leaning towards the better coverage, since I don't really need the extra minutes. The unfortunate part of all this is that the Nokia E70 isn't available yet... Nokia claims it's fixing some software bugs it discovered, they claim it'll be out later this quarter. We'll see how that goes :-) |
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| /Blog/General | Permanent Link | Comments (7) | ||
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| Comments | ||
| Man 0 Man Posted at Sat May 13 16:09:43 2006 by Nathan | ||
| Whatever happened to just going to the shop and getting the free phone :)
I hear ya, it's a huge waste of money, I hate mine and wish I didn't need it.
I gave up on the internet phones a while ago because of the cost, but it sounds like you are going to do some admining from yours. Good luck with that. I am sure it's possible but even just restarting apache on that keyboard is gonna stink to high heaven. However, as I am sure you have already thought, the alternative is worse...carry around a laptop that you can connect to the phone to get online...that doesn't sound like much fun either. | ||
| Posted at Sun May 14 21:22:29 2006 by Don Spidell | ||
| You can do some quick and dirty adminning by using text messaging. Create a "secret" email address like lkdglkdfjg@openthoughthosting.com. Then set up Procmail to execute commands depending on what you send to that email address. For example, sending "ra" to that email address could have Apache restart for you. Then you could have the server send you a text message saying that the command was successfully completed. How's that for a cheap hack? | ||
| Posted at Mon May 15 00:09:37 2006 by Eric Andreychek | ||
| Free phone? Bah, you know I'm too much of a geek for that :-) I spent months choosing a laptop... the very fact that I've discovered a phone that I like within a few weeks is a bit of a miracle in itself :-) The idea of setting up some macros is pretty cool... alas, the problems that tend to creep up aren't all that standard. The ones simple enough to be solved by say, a restart, are already being monitored by software which does exactly that. But, the idea is cool, and might be neat to have available for some things... and if possible, would be cheaper than a data plan ;-) If nothing else, being able to get statistics about what all is running, or not running, might be nice. The thing is that doing work on that keyboard isn't all that bad... not ideal, but it's similar to my Zaurus, which I already do plenty of work with. So, whenever I imaging doing admin work, I just ponder what it'd be like doing it on my Zaurus. | ||
| Cheap Hack indeed Posted at Tue May 16 16:35:12 2006 by Nathan | ||
| Hmm, I am not sure I would be comfortable with that. I suppose it's ok, but sounds like security through obscurity...one thing I do know DO NOT MAKE ANY MACRO CALLED: v1agr4 | ||
| Tax Deduction Posted at Wed May 17 08:50:34 2006 by Josiah Ritchie | ||
| Remember that you can take your second phone as a business expense tax deduction. In your case you'll need to take your wife's part off and some portion for personal use, but that's still some deductions and helps off-set the personal expense.
:-) I'm a cingular customer also (actually I started with AT&T) but I don't do any data stuff. I'm pretty much bare bones @ $60/mo.
Also, in my experience you can haggle with the sales reps to get great deals on phones, especially if you can find it someone offering it for free. AT&T had a matching policy. I figure Cingular does too. They won't match their own website though. If you push enough you might be able to get some good deals. It isn't like they aren't already asking for your first-born child so you have a position to barter from. | ||
| keybaord Posted at Sun Jun 11 11:40:00 2006 by hope | ||
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| net10 Posted at Tue Jun 20 20:36:48 2006 by Bro Bri | ||
| We're thinking about going with Net10. We don't really need to use the phones as much as we do. We're currently paying $60 for 400 family minutes. Net10 offers a prepaid plan for 10 cents a minute (hence the net10
-Bri | ||
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Copyright 2003 Eric Andreychek |