Posts tagged ‘Cingular Phone’

Is your current phone a bit tired or out of date? Would you like to enjoy the benefits of a free cell phone today? Well to get the most of out of a free phone package, you must take advantage of cash rebates, free accessories, free activation and free shipping. Your best pick would be Lets Talk.com, great phones and service.

There is nothing to buy up front. You can have a free cell phone from Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Motorola, Panasonic, or other name-brand phone delivered to your door in two days free! The only requirement to qualifying for this great offer is that you sign up for 1 or 2 years of wireless service.
Enjoy the convenience of owning a free cell phone
Most free cell phone providers will insist that they offer calling plans from national service providers such as T-Mobile or AT&T Wireless and that they use the same rates. It is true, but what they don’t tell you is they may reduce your options.

Offering free phones has always been a marketing tool. Mobile providers believe that if they can get you into their service, you’ll stay forever. You usually only get the free cell phone if you sign a contract for 2 or 3 years.

Phones offered for free are the cheapest and most ordinary phones. People shopping for any free cell phone are probably looking to save, but they may end up paying more. A great way to save money on cellular service is to sign up for a family or shared plan.

It really depends on what you want your cell phone for, who’s paying for it and if the free ones are really worth it. I believe a free cell phone may not necessarily be a bad offer; it’s just not that free.

The past, present, and future of cell phones

Just in the last few years cell phones (usually called mobile phones outside the US) have become de facto standards for most of the population. What once used to be a luxury item for a select few that was carried around in a large leather bag and was the size of the brick, is no longer.

Technology has advanced the mobile phone industry to the point where the phone is a mere commodity for vendors, meaning that’s not where they make the real money. It’s in the service plans, which require 2 year commitments usually, where companies like Sprint, Nextel (now Sprint Nextel), AT&T (now Cingular), Cingular, Verizon, and T-Mobile make the revenues that enable the cycle of technology innovation and marketing to continue.

While the downsides of cell phones have focused primarily on the annoyance of public conversations and the small possibility of brain damage due to cellular coverage near the ear, these pale in comparison to the benefits derived from cellular technology. For those who have had cell phones most of their lives (think anyone under 25), it’s hard to imagine life before cell phones. Writing down numbers in a paper directory, having change on hand (first a nickel, then a dime, then two dimes), knowing how to make collect calls, and finding pay phones in new cities were frequent logistic challenges. Not to mention the inconvenience of not being able to get access to those you need at any time.

At this point, corporate employees, sales professionals, parents, young adults, and anyone in industries where communication among many is critical could hardly imagine life without the benefits of mobile phones.

As technology matures, ringtones, cameras, GPS features, music, and multiple other features will be added to the hardware. And the software on phones will progress to include easier web access, advertisements, news downloads, and easier chat and email features – becoming the only piece of technology most use. In fact, in many countries in South Asia (where the industrial revolution never occurred) they have gone from agricultural industries right to technology, bypassing an entire type of economy. It is in these countries where the cell phone is an essential tool, enabling communication among millions who don’t own a computer.

As technology advances, and people respond positively to resulting changes, we will all benefit.

In cars, offices, restaurants, shopping malls and everywhere else in the country, cellular phone ownership is becoming the rule, not the exception. Everybody has one, it seems — and many of them are using ATT Wireless.

ATT Wireless had a steady, successful business on its own, and then joined with Cingular in 2004 to become even more powerful. Customers with AT&T Wireless phones found that their plans got even better: Cingular offers “rollover” minutes, meaning if you don’t use all your AT&T Wireless phone minutes one month, they carry over into the next month.

Also, when Cingular and AT and T Wireless combined, it combined their coverage areas, too. Between them, nearly the entire country is covered by Cingular or AT&T Wireless mobile service. (AT&T Wireless plans ought to be good: The company has been in the telephone business for more than 120 years!)

What kind of plans does ATT Wireless offer? There are individual plans and family plans, each designed to match your particular AT and T Wireless phone needs. One popular option is FamilyTalk, where all the members on the plan can talk to each other for free. Say you, your spouse, and your child all have AT T Wireless phones. Now you can call each other as often as you like without using up your minutes. (And those leftover minutes roll over into the next month, too!)

Text messaging has become very common, too, particularly among teenagers. ATT Wireless offers many plans that include text messaging, often with rates as low as 1 cent per message. Text messaging is especially useful when you want privacy, or when talking on your ATT Wireless mobile phone is not feasible.

What if you already have a cell phone through another provider and want to switch, but don’t want to change your phone number? Luckily, it’s now possible in most cases to bring your old cell phone number with you when you join ATT Wireless. For years, cell phone providers “owned” certain numbers, but no more. The courts put an end to that practice in 2003, and now customers can usually switch from one service to another without having to get a new phone number. This keeps competition high, because companies no longer “own” their customers’ phone numbers and thus could lose them to other providers.

ATT Wireless and Cingular work hard to ensure their customers’ satisfaction so they won’t move to a different company. And when people are fed up with other plans, they can come to AT&T and Cingular to see what they have to offer.

Don’t have a cell phone yet? You’re not alone, though the number is decreasing. AT&T Wireless and Cingular can walk you through the process if you’re unsure what kind of plan and phone you need. There’s no time like the present to become part of the future!