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How To Determine Which Cell
Service Is Best For You
by Jon Arnold
With every cell phone carrier advertising their latest
cell phones and super plans, it gets more and more difficult
to determine which one is the right one for you. How
do you know? If you live in a major metro area or almost
any larger city, the plans, service and coverage are
going to be pretty much the same. But if your intended
usage is outside the major metro areas or you will be
using your cell phone all over the place because you
plan to travel a lot with it, then this is where the
rubber meets the road and the RIGHT plan takes significantly
more scrutiny.
Before going any further, it is important to note that
you need to define what you plan to do with your cell
phone. Now with that said, throw that note away. What
you really need to determine is what ARE you going to
be using it for, and what capabilities and functionality
do you REQUIRE (not just merely "want" or find somewhat
cool or desirable) with your cell phone and cellular
service? If you don't define this BEFORE you start shopping,
it is almost inevitable that you are going to be spending
more than you need to, perhaps to a significant degree.
The first thing to note is where you will be using your
cell service the majority of the time. Find out what
carriers have the best coverage in your area. Again,
this is critical. For example, if you save $10 per month
but the carrier's coverage in your area is marginal,
how useful is your cell service if you drop one out
of 3 calls, and the other calls make you sound like
you are calling from the bottom of a bathtub? Regarding
the actual cell phone, unless you are just dying for
a particular model phone (and you should not be), choose
the cell carrier before you choose which phone you need.
There are very few cell phones that have features that
are particular to only one carrier. Standard equipment
would be a decent battery life giving you about 3 hours
of talk time. The built-in cameras take pictures of
a quality that is merely "ok" and will not win any awards,
and you will likely use that feature minimally if at
all after the novelty wears off. The ability to be an
MP3 player? Bag it - it will drain your battery faster
and does not deliver the quality of an MP3 player that
was actually DESIGNED to be an MP3 player. It provides
10-15 seconds of full motion video? Yawn. You won't
use it after the novelty wears off, but you WILL be
paying for that functionality. It has a built in PDA
with organizer functions? It will kill your battery
life.
Bottom line on the cell phone itself: let the cell phone
function as a cell phone, and don't try to force it
into performing functions that it was not designed to
do, because that will only drive up the price, and it
will not do any of those things as well as a device
that was designed to do them.
Let's say you have narrowed your carrier choices down
to 2, maybe 3. Now let's look at the plans. Who will
you be calling mostly? T-Mobile has plans that allow
you to select 5 people that you call most frequently
and gives you unlimited minutes to call them. Sprint
and Verizon usually allow you to call other cell customers
of theirs on an unlimited basis. What about nights and
weekends? Most carriers provide unlimited nights and
weekends. Note that despite the position of the sun
in the sky, "night" doesn't start until 9:00pm, or with
Sprint and an extra $5 per month, "night" can begin
at 7:00pm.
How many "anytime" minutes do you need? Be generous
here, because you could be paying as much as 30 cents
per minute or more as soon as you go over your allotted
anytime minutes. Yes, every time you call your voicemail
from your cell phone, that goes against your anytime
minutes.
Finally, your best bet is to buy online. In this age
of "immediate satisfaction", your desire is to waltz
into the cellular carrier's retail store, and walk out
of there talking on your shiny new cell phone. Don't
do it. Go into the retail store to get a hands-on view
of the phones you are considering, but with the spotlights,
the shiny chrome cases, and a sales rep smiling like
he's auditioning for Jaws, avoid the temptation. You
can always find at least an EQUIVALENT deal online,
and very frequently the online resource will also throw
in some extras like a carrying case, a car power adapter,
a travel adapter, and a hands-free kit, which would
cost nearly another $100 if you get it at the carrier's
retail outlet.
Bottom line: define what you want and be smart about
it. A cell phone can be a great thing, but you need
to feel good about having done the proper research to
get a great deal on it.
About the Author
Jon is a computer engineer who maintains many websites
to pass along his knowledge and findings. You can read
more about cell phones and cellular plans at his web
site at http://www.cellinsideinfo.com/
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