- Joined
- Jan 24, 2013
- Messages
- 8,834
- Reaction score
- 2,812
- Location
- Alabama
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Liberal
If I only used it for making calls & taking the occasional picture, neither would I. I use my Droid more for internet and cross-country navigation than anything else.
pleaseee ,my little dog :lol:
At 110 markets you will soon discover that "unlimited" has many limitations. I'm sure it'll be a great phone...when you have service.Later this month I'll get a Moto X for $299 off contract with unlimited everything for $40/month. You were saying..
At 110 markets you will soon discover that "unlimited" has many limitations. Verizon has about 500. Sprint is offering deals to grow their new post-merger LTE network. Good for you. Make the most of it. I'm happy paying more today for superior service today.
One of the things I'm happy about is how the bill is under my control. When I first got my Droid, my bill was $70 pr/mo. One device, very low usage.If you're happy with a monthly bill 5.5 times higher, more power to you.
One of the things I'm happy about is how the bill is under my control. When I first got my Droid, my bill was $70 pr/mo. One device, very low usage.
Life changes. I added a second line and a second Droid so that I could talk to my sons in Ohio. I bought insurance for both devices and Lookout for both devices.
Then I got a new job which requires me to travel a lot. I upped the data usage to account for the GPS navigator, portable internet hotspot (which is how I'm making this post from my PC), Netflix, and similar.
I make my bill in a day, so it's well worth it.
Those bills are for dedicated cell-phones, not smart phones.
Those are detached points. My control over the bill, and cost/benefit.Everyone's bills are under their control regardless of what one earns...
At 110 markets you will soon discover that "unlimited" has many limitations. I'm sure it'll be a great phone...when you have service.
Verizon has about 500 markets, the first high-speed cell network to cross the country. I'm happy paying more today for superior service today. I travel a lot and that's important. If you stay fairly local, that post-merger Sprint deal may work for you.
Those are detached points. My control over the bill, and cost/benefit.
I can tap a button and make absolutely any change to my service, right now. I don't have to call and talk to anyone. I don't have to change the contract. If I want to let my son in Ohio download a few games, I can quickly unlock that feature for his phone while we talk, he can get his game, and I can re-lock that feature. If we're having a slow week because of weather and I want to play some games or watch movies on those extra days off, I can up my data instantly. When work picks up, I can reduce my data back. That's the kind of control I'm talking about.
Cost/benefit: The cheaper plan you're looking at does not do what I need it to do.
I don't have the need to control the service of anyone else, and what makes you think I can't change my plan as necessary on the fly?
Well, I do, because those "anyone else" are my minor children.I don't have the need to control the service of anyone else...
I never said you couldn't. I said I was happy that I could.....and what makes you think I can't change my plan as necessary on the fly?
Where in that post did I say anything about what you could or could not do?One of the things I'm happy about is how the bill is under my control. When I first got my Droid, my bill was $70 pr/mo. One device, very low usage.
Life changes. I added a second line and a second Droid so that I could talk to my sons in Ohio. I bought insurance for both devices and Lookout for both devices.
Then I got a new job which requires me to travel a lot. I upped the data usage to account for the GPS navigator, portable internet hotspot (which is how I'm making this post from my PC), Netflix, and similar.
I make my bill in a day, so it's well worth it.
So, how much does your cell phone cost you per month?
Obama said ACA insurance would cost the equivalent of your cell phone bill.
“Through the marketplaces,” Obama said, “you can get health insurance for what may be the equivalent of your cell phone bill or your cable bill, and that’s a good deal.”
So, how much does your cell phone cost you per month?
I was just thinking how interesting it is that my phone bill is over $200 (has 3 smart phone lines with all the extras) but my insurance is less than $25 a month.
I'm still all for just going with UHC and just making medical insurance obsolete or at least unnecessary for the majority of people.
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