Sat Sep 23, 2006 12:05AM EDT
See Comments (353)
The hubbub over my recent post about who has the largest cellular network might have raised more questions than it answered. If the three biggest carriers all have about the same amount of coverage, how do you pick among them, especially considering they definitely don't cover the exact same areas?
The answer: Very carefully.
For most people, there's a lot of trial and error in picking a cell plan. They start with one company for a year or two. They decide the grass is greener on the other side and switch. After another year, they switch back. We're all vulnerable to advertising and hype, so it's hard to stay put, especially when a particularly important call drops off.
So, how do you pick a carrier? Here's what I recommend (in rough order):
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
I used to have T-Mobile and didnt get reception in a lot of places besides that the calls would drop a lot. Also, a lot of times I would hear this horrible static noise in the middle of a conversation that would not go away. I would have to hang up and call again, and it wasn't the phone because it happened to me with several phones and it happens now when I call other t-mobile ppl. I have Verizon and I have to admit I get reception pretty much everywhere and my personal experience with customer service has been great, they're very helpful.. BUT they're service is rather pricey compared to some other companies
Ive been with Alltel for almost 2 years now,I was with Nextel before Alltel and they had the worst service !! I have been treated kindly and If my question wasnt answered Alltel would get the answer for me right away.
T-mobile has the best customer services, and the price is very reasoable and you can change plan anytime without extra fees online or call their toll free. However, for the same reason, they threw me out the plan and told me that i would ever be able to use their unlimited call feature ever again. The reason of that was they said i used too much of " mobile to mobile" minutes and not enough of over time minutes. Dah?!
Have had wonderful success with Virgin Mobile, yes Virgin Mobile. They have a plan for $50.00 a month for 1000 minutes. That's of course only 5 cents per minute. You have to re-up at 30 days but you can roll over your minutes up to 5000! Also I've had coverage from Florida to Utah and all in between.
You are wrong about Verizon Wireless. They have a 30 day worry free guarantee...It used to be 15 days, but changed several months ago. Just wanted to keep you up to date.
The article ignores the REAL question - audio performance. Coverage is important but here in Silicon Valley, that's not an issue. Yet every phone I've tried has poor ergonomics and inadequate volume and clarity. Show me a cellphone with great sound and big buttons and I'll buy it. I'd be happy with a B&W screen to save battery life too. And please, cut out all the crap that clutters the interfaces just to extract more $$$ out of the user.
This is nice shows all the coverage maps. http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/04/27/alltel-americas-largest-network-nah/
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346 Posted by jjay_99_95670 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:35PM EDT Report Abuse
verizon wireless has a 30 day test drive, not 15 as stated in the article. also if you port out your number with in the first thirty days they will pay for all your calls. i did it, and it was not a big hassle either.