Cell Phone Service
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Sept 2006
Hi. What do people recommend for cell phones / internet
phone service to keep in touch with college students
travelling abroad? My daughter will be going to South
America. Thanks, mom of traveller
You need an unlocked phone and a SIM card for the country
or countries she'll be travelling in. Here's a couple of
sites I found with a Google search for ''sim cards south
america'' -- both appear to offer an international card that
works in many countries as well as county-specific cards.
http://www.cellularabroad.com/ppsc.html
http://www.wexas.ekit.com/ekit/MobilePurchase/Services
I've dealt with the first people to get a card for the UK
and found them very reliable and helpful. I think they're
located near San Diego. You might just want to call them
and get an idea as to what's feasible.
I'm sure this isn't the cheapest way to go, but it has worked well for
us in
Europe. We bought a phone from Mobal (www.mobal.com; ph. 888-888
-9162) for about $50. When we use it, we are charged $1.25/minute.
When
we're home, we put the phone away and there are no charges. The phone
connections have been excellent, and Mobal's service has been very
good.
But first find out about your current cell phone. If the GSM is right
for
international service, you might be able to use it.
Nancy
Re: Your student traveling to South America. Cell phone
coverage depends on your provider. Verizion has what used
to be called the North America Plan, which allowed very
liberal access for about $70 a month. I was in Mexico
this summer and could call home etc. I had a net of 1000
minutes per month, for me to call. Calls from the US to
me were free. A colleague with another provider had a
less generous, but still not very expensive plan with
night and evening hours. Worked well for her because of
time zone differences. A third friend was in Ecuador,
with no cell access. However, ''todo el mundo'' uses
calling cards to the US. Easily available, inexpensive,
but don't buy until you get there. Check the various web
sites.
Carolyn
My daughter spent last semester in Australia, and many of her friends
were also abroad (Chile, Scotland, Mexico, Spain). They all used either Skype or
iChat. You need a computer with internet access and a mic; for Mac users, the mics are
built-in; some of the PC users needed to buy a mic. Skype is free and
can be downloaded directly to your computer. The calls are free. She also had
a mobile phone (provided by her study abroad program) but used it for
intra-Australia calls, as international calls were both expensive to make and the reception
was much worse than the computer-connected calls.
Ellen
Aug 2005
I am looking for advice regarding which prepaid cell phone plan
is a good one for service & reception local & out of state. I
need it for mainly roadside emergencies. Also we will be going
out of state soon for a wedding in a new place & will need it in
case we got lost. I would appreciate v.much any
recommendations. I checked the archives & it seems to be
outdated.
jane
I've posted before on pay-as-you-go Virgin Mobile's service.
We (my wife and I) have been pretty happy with the plan, given
that we don't use the phone a whole lot (which sounds like
you). You buy your own phone for ~$70-120, depending on how
many frills you want. Phone use is then $.25/minute for the
first ten minutes in any given day, then $.10/minute after that
(e.g., a 30 minute phone call-- very rare for us-- would be
$4.50; same for three 10 minute calls, etc.). Roaming
included, long distance included (it's on the Sprint PCS
network-- not the best, but not bad, either). We've used the
phones in Kauai, Wash. DC, and even the US Virgin Islands, with
no problems. Virgin Mobile requires that you add $20 to your
account every three months. The best part is that the money in
your account rolls over-- there is no ''use it or lose it'' (at
least, not yet). So, if you're an infrequent phone user, you
can get away with the minimum-- $20 every three months, which
works out to less than $7/month! I've never had to up my usage
past that amount, and I don't feel like I've had to limit my
usage unduly. Last time I checked, I had a balance of $60 =
lots more talk time, if I need it.
Jim
A few months ago we shopped around for a prepaid plan. We chose T-
Mobile. The price was the best of all the others. But we wouldn't have
chosen it unless it got good service. My neighbor works for the SF
Chronicle and travels all over the place. She said she was satisfied with
it, so that's why we went with T-Mobile. We haven't travelled much yet
but so far everything's been fine.
Well connected
We just bought a prepaid plan from TMobile for my parents for similar reasons
(emergencies, trips, etc.). I found the company easy to deal with and the phone works
fine. I know there are other companies out there, but I couldn't tell which ones would
be around long term. I went to the TMobile store in El Cerrito, but I'm sure there are
other locations in the area. good luck
anne
I've resesarched all the pre pay plans and find Virgin the best.
I travel a lot all around the States and have never had a
problem with reception. (except Tilden) It's really easy to add
minutes right from your phone.
mm
I've been a very happy Tracfone customer for four years. I
don't use it for ordinary conversations, just for emergencies
and ''I'm-going-to-be-late'' type calls. Tracfone airtime cards
are easy to find now, at Safeway, Longs and office supply stores
such as Staples.
The NY Times did a review of these services on August 11th.
Here's the link:
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/11/technology/circuits/11basics.html?8hpib
Lorraine
Feb 2005
A previous posting about Metro PCS received no responses, so I
thought I'd try again. We need to buy a phone for our teenage
daughter, primarily for safety concerns, but being a teenager
she will burn up minutes that we don't want to pay extra for.
We just need to know that when she needs to call us to pick her
up, she will be able to reach us. We live in Oakland, so
coverage here and in Berkeley are of primary concern, but we
would prefer good coverage in the greater Bay Area. Has anyone
used this plan?
For myself, I also want to replace my current plan with Cingular
($20.00 per month for 30 minutes) for one of the pay as you go
plans. I am considering Tracfone, Virgin, and Boost Mobile; my
question is which plan has the best coverage area? Since I use
mine for roadside breakdowns and family emergencies, I really
need the few calls I make to go through.
I've had Tracfone for more than 2 years now, and am *very*
pleased with the coverage. From what I understand, they
piggy-back on other service, and seem to pick the strongest
signal etc. I've used mine from Monterey to Washington State with
no problems whatsoever. Just be sure to point out that she'll
burn up minutes on incoming as well as outgoing calls...! I use
my phone maybe 15 mins. a month and it's worth it for that (just
signed up for 1 year/350 mins again). But if she's going to use a
lot of minutes/month... I wonder if this is the solution for you.
You can peruse the Tracfone website (IE only, bleah) to see the
rates. If you want me to refer you, we both get 100 free minutes.
Jennie
I live in Berkeley and use Virgin and it has been perfect.
Service is fine. I greatly appreciate the pay ahead and pay
only for what you use aspect. I only use it rarely, but have
used it in Hawaii actually. I think you said that you live in
Oakland so I would get some input from Oakland people as to
Virgin reception - but my experiences have been absolutely fine.
margo
Jan 2005
I have a Siemens S56 cell phone which I love, but which has a non-standard headset jack. I have a hands-free headset that I would like to use with the phone, but it has the standard 2.5 mm plug. I went to the AT&T Wireless (now Cingular) store in Walnut Creek, where the phone was originally purchased, to see if they have an adapter and they don't. They gave me an 800 # to purchase accessories; I called, and they don't have one either. I looked online and saw what appears to be what I need, but it's such an inexpensive item I can't see ordering online as the shipping would cost more than the item itself. Any ideas on how to possibly find one in a store I can walk into? I can go either in the East Bay or downtown SF where I work. Thanks!
Lori
There's a little hole-in-the-wall shop on Solano (the block up
from Barney Burgers; right next to where a Subway store is going
in) that carries a lot of different gear and accessories. Also,
what about the shops on University below San Pablo? Seem to
carry a lot of gear unique to India -- i.e., converting tapes
and such -- and might just have what you're looking for. And,
have you tried Radio Shack? Seriously, they have oodles of
converters. Happy hunting.
Dec 2004
I'm considering switching my cell service to Working Assets. I
already use them for long distance and like their customer
service. Does anyone have them for cell service and can you
comment on the quality of the reception? Is it comparable to
AT&T/Verizon?
Fran
I have had the Working Assets cell for about a year now. They
license with Sprint, so it's the same coverage. There are the
occasional dead spots in the hills and in the boonies, but it's
been fine overall.
Wendy
I've had working assets cell phone for over a year. as you
may know, they actually use sprint phone service, so the
service is as good as sprint's. (maybe that is for their
regular long distance?) anyway it's fine, i've never had any
problem with it. I've used it around california and in new
york.
Nanu
I hate to say it, because I too appreciate the company and their
customer service, but after three years with a Working Assets
cell phone I bailed last year once number portability kicked
in. They run their phones off of sprint lines, which have very
spotty service around the east bay. I couldn't use my cell
phone in much of my house (in rockridge!) let alone in the
Berkeley hills. And this was with a good, new phone. I was sad
to do it, but I changed to Verizon and my reception has been
phenomenal. And I must say, the verizon customer service is
pretty great too.
Guilty social conscience, but at least I can use my phone
Sept 2004
We would like to get a cell phone to use only vary occasionally-
emergencies and when in a pinch.
So we are looking for a very simple phone and a very simple
plan, hopefully one that is inexpensive (and preferably with a
free phone!). We are willing to make a year long commitment.
Does anyone know of a plan like this?
Any information would be helpful!
Thanks a lot.
--one of the only people left of the planet without a cell phone!
To the individuals looking for a cell phone to be used ''only in
a pinch'': I would highly recommend Virgin Mobile
(www.virginmobileusa.com). While you need to purchase the phone
($70-$170), there is NO CALLING PLAN. This has worked great for
me for the past two years. Calls are 0.25/minute for the first
four minutes each day, then all calls after that are
0.10/minute. No roaming charges, weekend minutes, blah blah
blah. You can add money to your account online or through your
phone. I think you have to add some $ to the phone once every 1-
2 months to keep the account active.
Virgin Mobile user
Virgin Mobile USA might work for you. It is prepaid. The cost
per minute is 25 cents for the first ten mins in a day, and ten
cents a min after that. You only have to put $20 on your
account every three months - and the credit rolls over if you
are in good standing. The phone cost $60.
This is perfect for me because I do not use my cell phone much -
just basicaly for emergencies or to say that I am going to be
late.
Note: the website is very, very Gen Xish - which was a real
turn off to me. But I had been told about the plan and thought
it would work well for me. I have had no problems.
margo
Verizon offers a pretty good ''pre-pay'' deal if you really intend
to use the phone for emergencies only. There are no contracts or
credit checks. Also no taxes, fees, etc. - you just pay for what
you plan to use. You pay up front pay for a bank of
minutes/cents. All calls (whether local or long distance, as
long as it's one of the service areas) are 10 cents per minute,
plus a 25-cent connection charge per call (so the first minute
ends up being a total of 35 cents). A minimal voice-mail box is
included (you will be charged if you check your voice-mail from
the cell phone, but not from other phones). The main catch is
that the pre-paid time will expire (and you may lose your phone
number) if you do not add mroe to your account by an expiration
date. So, if you start by paying the minimum $30.00, you have to
add more by the end of 60 days, or you lose it. I think add-ons
are a minimum of $15.00, which will extend the deadline 30 more
days (the unused balance does not disappear - it rolls forward).
So, for $15 per month, you get a cell phone! I don't know if
they offer good phone deals with it. Look at their website for
more details.
Verizon coverage is very good.
R.K.
If it is truly for emergencies only--that is, 911--any used cell
phone will work. Even deactivated cell phones can dial 911. You
probably can find a discard somewhere (apparently millions end up
in landfills each year) and you'll only pay a few pennies for
electricity. Just remember to keep it charged and with you at all
times.
If it's also for occasional non-emergency use, you might consider
a ''prepaid'' phone, since most ordinary plans now start at $30 or
$35 a month (plus tax). Last time I checked Sprint had one for
$20/month but you only got 10 minutes (not a typo) included.
That's pretty occasional! Try checking some cellular companies'
websites for plans.
David
Well the cheapest cell phone service i know about is these two
guys who are at the Ashby Flea Market on Saturdays. They have
ugly old clunky phones for $20 with 100 minutes on them. You can
then buy a card with more. The minutes on the cards are pretty
expensive 15 cents or more a minute, but it's pay-as-you-go, so
this might work for you. For $30 you can get a cooler phone (they
had a red one with flames when i was there)with the same # of
minutes. I have no idea of the quality of the service, but if
you're really broke this might make sense for you.
Good luck- and don't get the red one i'm going back for it!
I think a good, inexpensive plan that comes with a phone is the
TRACFONE 1 year plan. It works great if you really do use the
phone on a occassional basis. It is about 100 a year or $8 per
month, I believe.
EP
For the kind of limited use you describe, you will be best off
with a pay-as-you-go plan rather than a traditional service
plan. We use Tracfone (www.tracfone.com) and have been pretty
happy with it. You can get a basic phone and a bucket of
minutes good for a year for around a hundred bucks. Buy more
minutes if and when you need them, at a cost that varies
depending on how many you buy at a time, what deals they're
running, whether you buy them online or in card form at Target,
etc. With some similar plans you'll have to buy more minutes
every 60-90 days whether you've used up the ones you have or
not, in order to keep your phone number active, but the package
we bought allows you an entire year before you have to buy
more. In general the per-minute cost is high compared to a
regular cell phone plan, but you can't buy a regular cell phone
plan for 5 or 10 minutes a month!
We figured if we ended up using more minutes, once we had the
phones, than we thought we would, we could always upgrade to a
cheap monthly plan. But we haven't, and even though
we ''refilled'' our phones before the year was up, we spent a lot
less than we would have for a monthly plan. And having a cell
has been even more useful than we thought it would be!
Holly
Sept 2004
we are changing our service providers, and was wondering if
anyone has any experience or opinions on the ''expanded signal
strength'' of the at&t gsm service and the established strong
signal of verizon. i know that verizon has towers and coverage
where none of the other carriers do, but their plan options pale
in value. nextel is also in the mix as my husband is enamoured
of the walkie talkie capability. - but again the coverage is
questionable. i'm primarily looking at signal strength, after
suffering for several years in the ebay with sprint. experience
about any of these 3 appreciated. thanks.
I have used AT&T and T-Mobile. I was frustrated with dropped
coverage or lack of coverage. We live in the Oakland Hills and
we couldn't make calls from our home on either provider.
We recently switched to Verizon and it is *wonderful*. We can
call from our home and almost everywhere else we've tried. It
may be a bit more expensive, but definitely worth it.
Diane
I have AT&T. It is pretty good as far as reception since they
now also use Cingular towers. There ARE choppy places
still. The thing I don't like about them is the the customer
service. I don't know if this is exclusive to AT&T (probably
not), but when you have to actually speak to a customer
service representative, you can wait a VERY LONG time (20
minutes!!). I find the bills to be cryptic and have needed
explanations. I am also stuck in a 2 year LOCAL plan (trying
to keep the cost down). I think the rollover minutes anytime
and anywhere that Cingular offers is a good idea, especially
if you have a teenager and/or you travel sometimes and
don't want to pay roaming charges. When I first got the
family plan I got two ''free'' phones, which we have both
come to hate, but replacing them is VERY expensive without
signing up for another 2 year plan! So, that said reception:
good, customer service/flexibility: bad.
I'll be interested in hearing what others say, especially about
CIngular.
good luck.
anon
I have AT&T and my husband has Verizon. Someone else's post
reminded me of the several reasons I need to run out and switch
my service. My husband loves his Verizon service (he recently
switched from AT&T), rarely gets dropped and has good sound
quality. We both use our phones quite a bit.
I dislike (not strong enough a word, but....) the fact that AT&T
now has Cingular towers (the previous post that reminded me).
The first reason is that Cingular 411 does not connect you when
you call for a number from information, just what you want while
on a cell phone! And it's not that they don't *automatically*
connect you, they don't connect you at all. The second issue may
not be relevant to you, but I have a 415 area code phone. When
the tower switches to Cingular, none of my programmed 415 numbers
work. I have to manually dial them with the area code (also just
what you want while using a cellphone, to manually dial more
numbers). One would think they would have worked out these bugs
before joining the systems, but perhaps I am asking too much. I
also haven't found that the addition of the Cingular towers has
improved the rate of dropped calls.
Lisa
Sept 2004
We recently moved to Alameda, and we are finding that cell
service here is not so good with our current provider. I have
heard that AT&T was reasonably good a few years ago, but can
anyone recommend a cell service provider with reasonably reliable
service on Alameda (or especially the south end near the Otis St
bridge) now? Many thanks!
Ann
I use Verizon and have cell service everywhere in Alameda
(including South shore).
We use to have Cingular but could not get service at South
shore.
Good Luck
anon
i also live in alameda and have had verizon for many years. i
have great service (not just here but everywhere else). our
daughter is using verizon back east in a rural area and has
better service than many of her friends; my husband has nextel
and it's pretty worthless (here and everywhere else!).
peggy
It's true, cell service on Alameda is poor. There are only two
cell towers here, I believe! I've had better luck upgrading my
AT&T phone, and even better luck switching to Tracfone. Tracfone
is a poor option IMHO if you use quite a few minutes/month, though.
Good luck with your search. You might want to sign up with a
provider, try it out, and return the phone within their return
period to see who has the best service. (Tracfone piggybacks on
whatever signal it finds.) Beware of restocking fees etc.
Jennie
Sept 2004
I've had a Cingular phone for the past 2 years and am very
unhappy with their customer service. It always feels to me like
they could care less if I am a happy customer and all they care
about is how much money they can get from me. Are there any cell
phone providers that have ethical business practices and want to
keep you happy with their service and company? Please share your
story if you have a good one about one of these companies.
Toby
We're former Cingular customers, too. We now use the pay-as-you-
go plan of Virgin Mobile USA, which I think is the best of that
category of cell phone plans. Whenever I've needed to contact
customer service (either by phone or by email), they've been
pretty quick to respond and seem (to me) to be friendly and
knowledgeable. They do seem to target a younger (MTV) kind of
demographic, which feels a little strange to me (I'm 50 this
year!), but, we're pretty satisfied.
JW
July 2004
Thinking of getting AT&T or Cingular versus Verizon. I'm going
to be using it as a real estate agent working in Berkeley. Any
thoughts? Any recommendations? Any horror stories? Thanks.
I had Cingular for a year... their rollover minutes plan is wonderful and
their price was right... BUT I couldn't get reception in my own house, not
even in the street in front of my house! (I live in Berkeley, in the flats.) So
I tried out Verizon for two weeks and got reception everywhere I wanted
it. My advice: Give them a two-week trial, take the phone everywhere
you might go, and see. You can compare prices all you want but if you
can't get reception, what's the point? All my friends and my daughter's
friends say nothing beat Verizon for reception.
Paying More and OK with it
I've used both AT&T and Verizon and live in the Berkeley Hills. I
experienced many holes in service with AT&T (there's a really bad one
as you're going down Marin through Albany, of all places), so I decided
to try Verizon. I've had Verizon for a year and have been very happy
with all aspects of the service. I can use it in the hills with no problem.
Maria
Aug 2003
I'm thinking of switching our AT&T cell phone service to T-Mobile,
because it's cheaper. Does anyone have any experience with T-Mobile--mostly
I'm interested in if the signal works well all over the Bay Area, their service, etc.
Thanks,
Joan
I have T-Mobile service and it is OK, but could be better. Since
this is my first cell phone, I do not have much comparison. But
there are times when I manually search for service and most of
the times AT&T appears on the display alone or with T-Mobile. So
that tells me that AT&T has the same or better coverage than
T-Mobile. Also I see people using cell phones in places where my
phone gets no service. So again, I think there are plans with
better coverage.
But overall, I am able to contact my wife most of the time.
Sometimes I need to go out of my building to call her or she
needs to drive a short distance to get a better signal, but we do
connect.
So for the purpose of connecting with my wife, T-Mobile works.
If I was to use the cell phone for calling customers or clients,
then I would look for better service.
David
I've never used T-Mobile, but I know AT&T has decent coverage at
a mid-high price. I use Verizon's America's Choice and have
never had a problem with connectivity or service. I pay about
$35 plus tax for 300 minutes, and I use my phone nationwide (I
travel to NYC often). My kids ALWAYS use the cell to call me,
and they've never had a problem reaching me. I also got them a
100 minute prepaid phone, so we can always reach one another if
we need. The 100 minutes translates to 200 minutes if you use it
mobile-mobile within Verizon service.
I've also heard that Cingular's new ''roll over'' plan is good if
you don't always use all your minutes.
Karin
My husband decided to switch to T Mobile last year because their
phones can be used in other countries and we travel a lot.
However, we found out as we were about to sign up for a very
inexpensive plan for both of us that TM is currently using
Cingular towers. I knew from previous experience that I can't
get a signal in my office at UC with Cingular so we
decided to leave me with AT&T. So now we have 2 calling plans:
he on T Mobile which is considerably cheaper but the service area
is weak, and me on AT&T which is quite expensive but with great
coverage.
There's always a downside
We switched a couple of months ago from AT&T to T-Mobile.
Basically we switched because my old phone died and decided to
get a family plan, T-moblie's was cheaper than AT&T. Basically
the T-Mobile service is good. We have been able to use it
everywhere we have been in the bay area... from Redwood City to
Santa Rosa, the San Francisco Zoo to Danville. Plus it has a
national calling plan so we have been able to call easily from
New York, Chicago, Las Vegas. The only reception problems I
notice consistently are 1) no reception in a certain 4 block
area near where I work in El Sobrante... but I had the same
trouble with AT&T in that spot, and 2) when I drive under the
BART tracks near the El Cerrito Plaza, especially if there is a
train at the station.
Rose
July 2003
My family and I will be on vacation in and around London and
Paris for two weeks in August but I am concerned about being out
of touch with my elderly father who is having health problems.
I assume my cell phone won't work there. Does anybody know how I
might get cell phone usage there so, if needed, folks, (i.e.
Kaiser Hospital) could get in touch with me easily? I hear it is
possible to rent cell phone in some places.
kb
I'm not sure if it will work in Paris, but we've been in London
frequently in the last couple of years and have found it cheaper
and easier to simply buy a cheap cell phone with the ''pay as you
go'' minutes (so there's no service plan). I think we got ours at
a Virgin Mobile store for about $50. We found this actually
cheaper than renting, and saved us the hassle of returning it.
Next time we go over, we'll just bring it along and buy more
minutes. Good luck!
Jennifer
I was recently in Paris and Provence for two weeks and got a
phone through www.acetelecom.com. They fedex'd the phone to me.
It was easy to use- it gives you a US number so it easy for
folks to call you. I rarely did not have service. It was fairly
inexpensive (in comparison to other thigns I found on the Web).
Your phone may be capable of going overseas but you'll need to
call your phone service provider to find out. I have Nextel and
their cheapest phone which wouldn't work. They say you can rent
a phone from them but it required that I go to a special store
either in Dublin or in the Mission and neither was easy for me
to do at the last minute. My family was told by their carrier T
mobile that their ohones would work- which they did-somewhat-
they could call out to me and to the US, the US could call out
to them but I couldn't call them from my phone nor could they
dial an international number so I'd be nervous to rely on that.
You can also rent a phone from the Paris airport. The only
caveat with the rental phone is that it did not work in the
states- so my three hour layover in NYC required that I use a
payphone-egads so old school! Anyway have a great time.
Juliette
Check out http://www.rentaphone.co.uk for rental phones. They
have a US base in Philadelphia and can send you a phone before
you leave ($25 delivery fee, but it saves the VAT and fees) or
you can pick it up at the airport when you arrive. Cost is $6 a
day plus $1.99 a minute for calls (incoming is free) -- but
those are the UK fees, and there may be more $$ for
international.
Also, this is information I saved from a Chronicle article a
couple of years ago. Not sure how much of it is still accurate
(rates have undoubtedly gone up), but I'd be willing to bet
Nextel still does the rental.
''Nextel rents its worldwide phones to travelers for $10 a day,
plus the considerable cost of each call. For details, phone
(800) 639-8359 or check the Web at www.nextel.com and click
on ''Nextel Worldwide.'' AT&T (800-888-7600) rents overseas phones
for rates ranging from $39 a week to $60 for three months. (You
might cut the cost significantly if you're planning to rent a
car in another country. Ask if the agency - like many American
car rental outfits - can provide you with a cell phone, as well.)
''Foreign cell phones do not come with numbers programmed into
them. Customers activate their phones by popping in so-called
SIM cards - little devices ranging in size from a postage stamp
to a credit card. To ''charge'' your SIM card, you buy prepaid
time at tobacco shops, pharmacies, gas stations and kiosks
almost everywhere abroad. So you need an inexpensive GSM phone
and a SIM card for the country you're visiting. You can purchase
the phone for as little as $99.99 at a Bay Area company called
Planet Omni (1480 Wharton Way, Concord, CA 94521; phone: 925-246-
7103; Web: www.planetomni.com; e-mail: info@buyundercost.com).
SIM cards are available through a company called Telestial
(along with inexpensive GSM phones). Prices can run as low as 15
cents a minute from England. Elsewhere in Europe, per-minute
costs to the United States range from 63 cents to $1.74.
(Contact: Telestial, 4689 Mission Blvd., San Diego, CA 92109;
phone: 858-274-2686; fax: 858-274-2757; Web: www.telestial.com;
e-mail: moreinfo@telestial.com.)
''Before heading overseas with your cell phone and your SIM card,
sign up for a ''callback'' program. These enable you to bypass the
carrier in the country you are visiting; you pay only for point-
to-point calls within the United States. Want to phone your
sister from a wine bar on the Rhine? Start by dialing a U.S.
phone number provided by your callback service. After one or two
rings, you hang up. Because you didn't connect, you are not
charged. About a minute later, your cell phone jangles. Upon
answering, you hear a U.S. dial tone. Punch in your sister's
area code and phone number, just like you do at home. Here's the
best part: Because this is an incoming call to your cell phone,
it counts as a freebie. You will be billed by the callback
company at a lower domestic rate. I checked out a callback firm
called CogniDial (on the Web at www.cognidial.com) and found
that a 15-minute call from France would cost $1.95 at 13 cents a
minute.''
Norm
You can easily rent a Nokia cell phone that will work
throughtout Europe via AutoEurope. I have done this several
times and it's been excellent. It costs about $80. a week plus
airtime charges. (You can also rent a satellite phone but they
are much more expensive.) Go to www.autoeurope.com or (call 1-
888-223-5555) and then click on the cell phone menu. They fedex
the phone to you in advance of your trip, you charge it up and
then you turn it on when you get where you are going. You can
also hook up the phone to your laptop and use it for
emailing/faxing.
Debby
June 2003
Can anyone comment on the quality of T-Mobile as a cellular
phone provider (with or without internet access)? I've read the
few recommendations that exist on this list, but wanted more
current observations. Thanks.
Dianne
My wife and I are on the Family Plan with T-Mobile. We can call
each other for free any time and ALL weekend calls are free. In
general, I can connect with my wife most of the time. Since this
is my first cell phone, I do not have much to compare other than
the following observations.
Occasionally the phone will have not be able to connect to a
T-Mobile (actually Cingular) tower, but can communicate with an
AT&T tower. But upon requesting a connection to the AT&T tower,
the request is refused. The point is that it seems that overall
the coverage of AT&T is better than T-Mobile (Cingular in
Northern CA).
The places where I do not have service are on Grizzly Peak from
Fish Ranch Road to Centenial. Also I had spotty service while
skiing near Sugar Bowl near Truckee. Also I do not get good
reception in my office at LBNL, while two doors a coworker gets
fine reception. I am not sure which service he uses, but I
suspect that it is AT&T.
David
We just signed up for T-Mobile service, with the plan where we
can talk to each other for free, plus unlimited weekend calling.
My husband works in Berkeley, and I work in El Sobrante. My
husband gets excellent reception all day long, even inside the
building where he works. I don't get such great reception where
I work though... I didn't expect to get reception in doors where
I work as I never did on my previous service, but the reception
on the streets is a little inconsistent near there also. I get
fine reception the closer I get to Richmond and it is excellent
by the time I get to El Cerrito.
I also must note that on my previous service (AT&T) I got
horrible reception driving near (within 4 blocks) of a BART
station, I have not had that experience with the T-Mobile. I
don't know if that is service related, or because of a change in
phones (we got two new Nokia 3390's for free when we signed up),
or if it is just a coincidence (the reception was usually worse
when a train was pulling in, and perhaps that just hasn't
happened while I have been using my new phone.)
Rose
We have the family plan with T-Mobile. It's mostly fine,
except for a few 'dead' spots around Berkeley, namely most
of Cedar Street, parts of MLK Way (near Fat Apple's). I'm
sure there's more, but it hasn't really been a problem for me.
However, if I lived on Cedar...
julie
Feb 2003
As of the 12th of this month I am finally free of my current
cell phone provider!
I am looking for advice on a new provider. This is what we need,
perhaps you've been in the same boat ( :
* 2 phones
* we're thinking about dumping our land line completely so would
need unlimited (almost) talk time, both local & nationwide.
* GOOD reception. our last provider (cingular) has not worked
good for us, we've even had problems with no service on san
pablo and on the berkeley campus!
Any experiences are most appreciated. There wasn't any new
advice/recommendations on the website.
Thanks!
looking for a new cell phone provider
My husband and I have a two phone plan with Verizon wireless. He
got the cheapest phone they have and he has stange reception
trouble all over the place. On San Pablo,etc. I, on the other
hand, bought a $200+ phone. I have never had a reception
problem. I even get it at Lake Anza in Tilden park when none of
my friends get reception on their phones. So it is worth
considering that it could be the phone and not just the service.
Dana
Verizon is the best for reception. I know this has been proven
by someone (Consumer Reports?) but I don't remember by who.
Also, their America's Choice plan covers a lot of America,
including the very small town in Vermont my mother lives in,
which other plans don't. They are costlier than Cingular, but
offer specials every two months or so that you can take
advantage of. We now pay $75/month, not including tax, for 750
shared minutes (two phones), 1,000 mobile to mobile, and 3,000
night and weekend.
Regarding T*Mobile: their local service is provided by
Cingular. I believe their network is east-coast or Europe
based, and after they grow their network they won't use
Cingular.
Also, check www.letstalk.com, www.getconnected.com,
www.cnet.com, and www.epinions.com.
Jodi
I used to work for a telecom reseller company which ofered a
range of telcom products, including wireless and long distance.
Regarding wireless reception, one option is to rent a phone for
a week or so, try out the different local providers. Verizon
(used to be GTE) is good, but I have found AT&T (used to be
CellularOne) to have better reception overall in the Bay Area,
especially hilly areas.
Unlimited talk time with no long distance programs on wireless
providers are not always available at the low-end range, and are
not usually cost effective one-stop providers. A good telecom
company should provide analysis for you if you give them your
previous 3 months bills. Like any sales situation - cars,
houses, sevices etc - , don't let them fast-talk you into
anything on the spot. There is a grace period, even after
you've signed a contract, so read the fine print!
PP
I'd recommend AT&T, purely on the basis of reception in BK is
far better than what what my friends have, cingular, t-
mobile... I heard it is comparable to verizon tho'.
John
I'm not sure about the 2 phone thing, but as far as reception
goes I've always had good luck with Sprint pcs. I've had
cellular service with them for about 2 1/2 years now and there
have been few times that I didn't have service when I needed it.
But I also wasn't using it as a land line too. Good luck!
Sarah
If you are thinking about dumping your land line then your main
criteria should be coverage. The best reception is usually with
AT&T Wireless or Verizon. Borrow a friend's phone and check if
it works in all parts of your house -- I can use my AT&T
Wireless phone in only one small part of my home, although it's
fine on campus. Good luck.
Elizabeth
January 2003
I primarily use my cell phone to stay in touch with my teen-aged
daughter and realize we each need our own phone. I'm looking for
a service provider for two cell phones in the Berkeley area at a
reasonable price.
I currently pay $25 per month for Verizon service and would
prefer to pay less than $50 for service for two phones. However
the Verizon two phone plan is at least $60.
Previous messages on the website about cell phone service are
primarily about quality of reception for one phone. Can anyone
suggest a reasonably-priced two phone plan with good service in
the Berkeley area?
Arlene
Try Cingular. As I understand their family plans, you pick the
level of minutes you want and then add additional phones for $10
a month. The two phones share the total number of minutes, so
you'd need to be sure your daughter (and you) didn't exceed
them, but if your need is just to keep in touch with other with
short calls, you ought to able to find a plan that will suit
your budget. We have three phones and keep it under $50 a month
since we don't use them a lot -- but, boy, it's great to have
them when you need them.
Norm
If you don't plan on using the phones for extensive chatting,
why not consider a pay-as-you-go plan? My wife and I looked at
the various family plans, and you're right-- you can't get away
with less than $60/month. We ended up buying 2 phones from
Virgin Mobile, where roaming and long distance are free, and the
flat rate is 25 cents a minute, and 10 cents a minute after the
first $2.50 (on any given day). They require you to use a
minimum of $20 every three months, so, for two phones (and
limited use), you can go as low as ~$14/month-- which includes
all taxes and surcharges (the other plans forget to tell you
that there's another ~$5/mo, or more, in taxes and misc. charges
on top of your plan).
As an added bonus, I suspect that unused minutes on Virgin
Mobile will roll over, as long as you keep seeding the $20 every
3 months.
The only caveats- no free phone deals, and the possibility that
they could raise the 25 cent/minute charge. With respect to the
latter, I think the cell phone market is competitive enough that
they won't do that.
Jim
Nov 2002
Has anyone recently researched family plans for cell phones--I'm
looking for lowest possible monthly rates & not mega minutes.
bstrads
I am on the Verizon Wireless family plan. I just wanted to make
sure you are aware of the service needs as well. I have found
that our phones have service up in the Oakland Hills as well as
out on the Ocean when my husband goes out fishing. We did not
have this good of a service when on Sprint. This is just
advice to note that you may get a great deal, but no service
where you need it. AT&T service is pretty good too from what I
have been told of those users. I use my phone a lot to call my
family back in the midwest, so I am paying for the minutes.
Verizon has lots of good plans, I suggest calling them and
talking to whom ever you choose as a carrier, you can usually
get a better deal when talking to someone over the phone.
Chris
Nov 2002
I am planning on switching to AT&T Wireless for my cell phone service. I
would be curious to know what others who have this service use for their
cell phone (manufacturer, model) and what they like/don't like about the
phone. Is it worth getting a Bluetooth model phone or is it still too early
in the game for Bluetooth to be useful? (Re: Bluetooth, I am a Mac user
using OS X Jaguar.) Anyone have the Sony Ericsson T68i or the Nokia
8390? They are both highly rated AT&T phones (as per Cnet).
Lori
AT&T is onhe of the providers with the worst coverage in the Bay
Area. And once your are a customer try calling there customer
service number, you will wait for hours and then talk to
untrained customer service reps that try to up-sell you instead
of solving your current problem.
I have heard good things about the new company T ''something. I
have 5 lines, (all my kids have phones) and coverage in
Oakland/Berkeley is terrible.
DRS
I'm not sure if it's a Nokia 8390 or not, but I got my cell
phone free from AT&T because I was ''switching'' from WorldCom to
them (not that I had been given much choice). If you call AT&T
wireless and ask them about the free cell phone offer
for ''migrators'' I think they call it, they will give you a
number to call and send you a pretty nice Nokia phone.
elisabeth
Jan 2003
I need to replace a cell phone. I use it rarely & want to spend
as a little as possible for a very basic phone. I don't want to
spend the $75 some I was quoted for a refurbished one. Is there a
used market? Any suggestions welcome. Thanks!
Rebecca
E-bay is probably your best bet. Just make sure the phone will
work with your service.
Cecile
Sept 2002
Help! Being the frazzled mom that I am, I recently lost my two
month old T-Mobile Cell phone. I would like to replace it ASAP
but the service provider wants to charge me between $150-200
(ouch!) and two of the stores I checked out are just not
interested in me because they sell activations not phones. I'm
really annoyed by this because I know folks have cell phones all
over the place that they no longer use. Any suggestions are much
appreciated. Thanks!
Heather
T-mobile is operating in CA & NV on Cingular's network.
They're on a GSM 1900 network which uses a digital PCS
phone and a SIM chip. The phone can be replaced rather
cheaply, if you only need basic functions, at eBay
auctions or anyone who's discarded their Cingular/Pac-
Bell phone when switching to another provider.
I've never lost my phone, so I couldn't say how one would
replace the SIM chip, which uniquely identifies your
phone and phone number. I would guess that only T-mobile
could issue them. It's a thumbnail-sized plastic card
that was once attached to a plastic ''credit card''. It's
usually inserted into the phone underneath the battery.
Good luck.
kim
You can get a cheap cell phone from ebay or craigslist (perhaps
even on the parents network if you post there) and then have
them create a new chip and install it. I also lost (temporarily as it
turned out)
my cell phone. It cost me about $25 to have cingular burn the
new chip and five minutes to install it.
Good Luck.
Sept 2002
I'm thinking of getting a Handspring Treo (cellphone/PDA/wireless
email) for my wife and wanted to get reactions to ''Sprint PCS
Vision '' coverage in the Berkeley/Kensington area. She spends a
lot of time in the Berkeley/Kensington Hills and I wonder if
coverage is spotty there. Also, any feedback on the Treo itself
would be great.
FYI, we currently have conventional cellphone service through
AT&T. Coverage in the hills has deteriorated over the past year,
with random disconnects added to the known dead spots (on
Arlington near the Circle, around Monterey Market, etc).
John
We found Sprint PCS very spotty even on the Clark
Kerr Campus, which isn't far up in the hills.
Joanne
I used Sprint PCS a few years ago and I got no coverage past the
Marin circle. I've now been with Verizon for 2 yrs and been
very happy with it. I have some spottiness right around my
house (behind Cragmont school at Marin and Spruce) but I at
least know that someone is calling me and can call back from my
home (land-line) phone.
John
I had Sprint PCS because I used to live and work in SF and it
was pretty reliable there. However, I moved to Montclair and
the reception was terrible. I worked at Cal and drove around
the Berkeley and Oakland Hills often...I could not get service
from work to home. I went down to the Sprint store in
Emeryville, stood in line for a long time, and had new software
downloaded on my dual phone- this, I was told- would solve my
problems. No such luck. I finally got so fed up I switched to
Verizon. Now I get great reception.
annon
Sept 2001
Recent world events have convinced us to finally get a cell phone -
genral anxiety reduction effort, I guess. The archives have some
advice but it's outdated due to mergers and changes in the cell
industry. Any advice on reception with Worldcom and Verizon in
Kensington/the hills? Past posts praise AT & T's hills reception,
and report bad performance of Sprint and pac bell; any updates from
subscribers to those companies? Lastly, any advice on current
bargains or where to buy a phone? Thank you for any advice; it's
such a wonderful thing to benefit from all your experience. Marty & Valerie
We have Verizon analog service: we chose analog because my husband does a lot
of bike riding in sparsely populated areas. We live in the Berkeley Hills near
Kensington and he's called from various areas of the Hills without problems.
We signed up through Radio Shack and got a really good deal on the phone: the
phone ended up costing us less than $0 (we actually got a rebate). We
initially thought we'd get the service for a year and then restudy the
situation but it's been two years now and we're not in any hurry to switch.
My husband's advice when I asked him: shop around and see who will give you
the
best deal. Also: Verizon is supposed to have the best coverage around here
but if you travel around the US a lot, Sprint is supposed to be best.
Fran
I've been pretty happy with my cell phone. It was the lesser-
cost phone, but it is fancy enough for me. It was "free", as
they all are these days, with a 2-year contract, which suited
me just fine. The company was Cellular One, which was swallowed
up by AT&T Wireless. The reception is _ok_ but not crystal-
clear. I looked at getting a more expensive plan (after my
contract expired) that included unlimited long-distance, in
order to save some money, but the connection just isn't that
clear, especially from home. Maybe the newer phones are better
now; maybe not!
Another thing I looked at when shopping around (I got mine
at Good Guys in Emeryville) was the coverage area. I had
heard that Cellular One had great coverage in a wider area,
and was hoping to use my phone as a safety backup on trips
up I-5 to Oregon. At the time, Sprint & PacBell PCS just
didn't have to coverage in that area. So if you visit
relatives often, check to make sure the area is sufficiently
covered. Jennie
Good Article in the New York Times (somewhat specific to New York)
on emergency mobile phones.
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/27/technology/circuits/27STAT.html
-- Myriam
1999
Dear Parents,
I have finally decided to break down and buy the peace of mind that comes
with a cell phone. I just want to know that in the event that my child
gets sick or injured that I can be reached when I'm not in my home or
office. So I ask for your expertise! What brand and service has worked/is
working for you? I certainly don't need anything fancy. I don't need to
use it very much, so a plan with a minimal # of minutes per month would be
sufficient. And all the call waiting and bells and whistles would just go
unused, so I'm talking very basic phone and very basice service. If you
wouldn't mind including some information on cost, that would also be much
Mary
Does anyone have positive or negative recommendations
for particular cellular phone companies? More specifically,
we'd like to buy two phones, and their main usage would be
to call each other, several times a day, for extremely short
calls.
I found a GREAT!! site to help figure out which service to select:
www.talkingonair.com
You pick your region and then using their Wizard, you select choices
based
on where you'll be using the phone, how much, which is more important
-
voice quality, coverage, price, etc. etc. It also lists the current
promotions!!
Check it out!
Based on recommendations in this list, we recently started Cellular
One
service with a pair of Ericsson KF788 phones. Dual mode, tri band,
with
built-in vibrate, also data-capable. Very small, appx 125% size of
Star-Tac. Battery seems to last 35+ hours on standby (based on one
week's
usage). $150, currently getting $100 rebate so net $50, also ours
came w/
gift certificate for extra battery. Cellular One has some plans that
let
you roll-over unused hours, we went with one of those.
www.ericsson.com or
www.cellone-sf.com, also try www.simplemobile.com or
www.talkingonair.com.
John
GTE has a family-net program where the second phone has a reduced
monthly rate,
and calls from phone b to phone a (but not from phone a to b) are
either free
or cheap. We looked a little bit and didn't see any similar deals
with other
companies, but things might have changed.
Dominic
We have GTE for emergency use.
I think the most basic plan is ~$18/month which includes
10 free minutes, then it is around 34 cents after that. After various
taxes the
monthly charge (assuming you don't exceed 10 minutes) is about $22.
Though digital phones are more clear, their range is smaller and the phones
cost more. I'd recommend the analog Nokia #918 which you can purchase at
GTE...,
I think its around $20. The battery is good (it lasts about 20 hours on
standby) and you can store a lot of phone numbers.
Kevin
I wanted to give some recommendations to the father interested in
purchasing a cellular phone. I too waited for almost two years to
purchase a phone, because for a while it started looking like a
fashion trend to own one. Everyone had a phone and for some stupid
reason they would all use it while driving and stop
traffic. Ugh!!!!Well, over Christmas my husband and I decided to
purchase one and looked to several companies and what they had to
offer. Of course during the holiday season all the cell companies had
wonderful offers, but we found GTE to have the most profitable one. I
am not sure if they are still running the special, but we currently
pay $18/month for 300 minutes a month, off-peak hours, meaning after
7pm and weekend starting Friday, at 7. We get charged $.35/minute for
every minute we speak during peak hours (7am-7pm), and insurance is
included in that price. Therefore, if anything happens to the phone or
it's stolen, GTE automatically replaces it. What comes to be most
expensive are the phones. My husband, as a Christmas gift, purchased a
really nice one, but I am sure that there are several under $100. You
would probably have to go to a GTE server to check out the phone
prices.Around the same time my parents purchased a phone through that
Ronald McDonald special, which cost them $20 for the phone and a $50
activation fee. The problem with this deal were their rate plans. My
parents got the least expensive one, which included 500 minutes/
month, but only on weekends. And, their weekend minutes did not begin
until midnight, Friday through Sunday. For $10 extra, you were able to
get 100 min./ month during peak hours. Finally, CellularOne is
offering 2000 minutes, any time until the year 2000. I believe for $24
or so, you can get 170 minutes a month, for any time. Any minutes not
used during that month, are transferred over to the next month which
could allow you to have over 200 minutes or more a month if you are
careful with the amount of time you use your phone.Like I said
earlier, the service rates are great, but what comes to be very
expensive are the phones. Since you are not interested in anything
fancy, you could probably get something for under $100. Check it out
and compare! I hope this helps!
Monica
I recently got a cell phone for the same reasons. I got mine via a promotion
through Parrot Cellular/PacBell: donate $20 to Ronald McDonald House and get a
free Erikson phone. You have to sign a year-long contract agreement, of course.
The cheapest deal they had was 10 free minutes, 100 free on weekends, for
$25/month. I think every extra minute is $.45/minute. I don't know if the
promotion is still going on, but you can call Parrot Celullar, or call a Pac
Bell PCS retailer. There's one on Piedmont Avenue in Oakland.
I recently got a cell phone for the same reasons. I got mine via a promotion
through Parrot Cellular/PacBell: donate $20 to Ronald McDonald House and get a
free Erikson phone. You have to sign a year-long contract agreement, of course.
The cheapest deal they had was 10 free minutes, 100 free on weekends, for
$25/month. I think every extra minute is $.45/minute. I don't know if the
promotion is still going on, but you can call Parrot Celullar, or call a Pac
Bell PCS retailer. There's one on Piedmont Avenue in Oakland.
Laurel
I just wanted to make a few comments on the 'emergency' use of cell phones.
On a recent climbing trip in Joshua Tree I had the opportunity to borrow a
cell phone for 'emergency' use. The emergency came in the form of a crashed
motorcycle in the center lane of Hwy. 1 in Malibu. I went to help out the
victim, while my girlfriend spent 5+ minutes waiting to get through to 911
on the cell phone. In a cell phone emergency situation you're better served
if you have your local emergency dispatcher number.
I further found that our particular cell phone company/service did not work
in the clear environs of Joshua Tree. No people, no relays, no service.
Soooo, the moral of the story is: know your cell phone's limitations! 8^)
Elmar
Check earlier string of replies to a similar question.
My wife has found a deal w/Cellular One. For about $20/mo., you get a
phone and 45 *ANYTIME* minutes, with a two year commitment. The whole
transaction was done over the phone w/ credit card. We received the cell
phone by mail. She did some comparison shopping and found this was the
best deal. You can get GTE (w/phone) for $15/mo, but those minutes are off
peak.
Eric
November 2002
I make occasional trips to Hawaii for my fieldwork, where I rent a
house that has no phone. I want to have a cell phone that I can
use when I'm there, and toss in my glove compartment for
emergencies when I'm at home. I don't mind paying a high per-
minute cost, as long as the monthly cost is low, because my use
would be so occasional.
Is Trac-Fone the answer? I would need good coverage in Hawaii and
here, and it looks like I could get plenty of minutes (i.e., about
300 per year) for about $10/month. Has anyone tried it? How was
their customer service? How good was the phone? Did you use
minutes much faster than anticipated? Alternatively, is there some
other service I should consider?
Virginia
I use TracFone and it's great. I bought a reconditioned phone
for $20, and bought 150 prepaid minutes in the spring which I
still haven't used up. It's so much cheaper than a monthly
contract and I've had no problem with customer service (because
I really haven't needed any). I think the mobile phone coverage
is the same as other services - I can hear pretty well when I'm
in the city and there's no coverage out in the mountains.
ramisima
You should also look into Virgin Mobile. The per minute
charge is .25/min for the first 10 minutes per day and only
.10/min for every minute after the first ten. No roaming/long
distance/extra regulatory fees/taxes. You can buy the phone
at Best Buy and through the Virgin website($99) and that
gets you 30 minutes to get started when you activate service
online. You can buy extra minutes at at minimum of $20
which will last 3 months. All in all, I think that I calculated
that the Virgin phone might be a tad more expensive for the
first year than the Trac phone if you purchase the one year
prepaid plan. However, in the event that you happen to use
the phone more than you think (and if you have ever owned
a cell phone, you know what I mean!), then it makes sense
to go Virgin. You just won't find any per minute rates that
low on any phone service (less than $7/mo. and/or .10-.25/
minute after the initial phone purchase).
CA
I actually use AT&T's prepaid phone, and the service so far has
been excellent. Virgin also has a prepaid plan. The AT&T free to
go seems to offer severral bonus minutes, and if you ever decide
to switch to ''regular'' service, the chip is already installed.
With a Tracphone, you would need to have the chip replaced.
Mizzbee
I got Tracfone after reading a post here. Initially I bought the
phone at Longs but it was an obsolete analog phone so I
returned it and went to the Tracfone website. The
reconditioned phone plus 150 mins and a year's service
was $94, a great deal. I was happy w/ their quick delivery of
the phone, the set-up was relatively easy online (though I
had to call to get the 150 mins to show up on the phone).
They made a call to me to make sure activation was all
under control, which seemed considerate.
Most of my calls are under a minute so I'm not burning
through the minutes much at all. You might want to make
sure they have coverage in Hawaii. I haven't tried roaming
yet...you spend 2 units per minute to roam and have to call a
number before you leave to reset the phone.
Kristine
Sept 2002
Our two year term with Cingular Wireless is up and we need to
change our service. We haven't been happy with Cingular, and we
actually want to switch over to a pay as you go emergency type
service. We already own the phone, obviously. Is there such a
service if you already own the phone? We almost never use it,
mostly because we can't even make a call when we need to (can't
get a signal). If anyone has any ideas, I'd appreciate it. We
live in the Walnut Creek area, but we spend a lot of our time
near Albany and Berkeley.
Jen
We just got a TracFone. You have to buy a special phone and activate it
for a particular number of minutes that you must use within a particular
unit of time. I bought 150 units (1 unit = 1 minute locally; 2 units = 1
minutes when you're roaming, which is basically when you're outside of
Northern/coastal Calfornia) that I can use within a span of a year for
about $90 from walmart.com. I also bought the phone through them for
about $60. I got a lot of extra minutes for activating the phone for the first
time and activating it over the web. Supposedly, they hook in to any
available network. In practice, my coverage in Berkeley is ok, but not as
good as I got with Verizon.
If you think of it as cost-per-minute, it's expensive. If you think of it as
service for a year, it's cheap. I was spending $30/mo. for 250 minutes/
mo. with Verizon, but I was only using 6 minutes/mo. It's really for people
who only want a cell phone occasionally. Get more info at http://
www.tracfone.com/.
Mimi
Virgin mobile has a pay as you use plan. The calls turn out to
be 25 cents/minute for the first ten minutes a day then
10cents/minute after that. They have a minimum spending
requirement of $20 every three months.
Under an arrangement they have with Sprint PCS, customers have
access to service anywhere on the Sprint network.
I bought my phone at Target and activated it online.
Check out their website: www.virginmobileusa.com
Good Luck
Sept 2002
Hi - I am wondering if anyone can recommend a cell phone service
provider. I am looking for a cell phone only to use in
emergencies, and I want to pay as little as possible for the
service (of course!) I am not a ''talk on the phone'' kind of
person so extra minutes, roaming minutes, long distance or
whatever is of no value to me. I just want a number that school,
summer camp or whoever can call me at in an emergency.
Theresa
Try Tracfone! I've had Tracfone service for a year, because I
wanted exactly what you're describing. It's like having a
payphone with you. They've changed their rates a bit (and
upgraded the phones to all-digital, so the phone is no longer as
cheap as the one I got), but basically you buy their phone
(mine's a Nokia) and prepaid time -- minimum 30 minutes for
$17.99. After that, the only requirement is to buy more time
every 60 days. If you don't, you can easily start service
again, but they don't guarantee you'll get the same phone
number. That's less than $9 per month. Plus, if you haven't
used up your time in the 60 days (I never have) it's carried
over -- you do not lose it if you don't use it. I have not had
any problems with the service, nor have I encountered
any ''blind'' areas. The website is www.tracfone.com.
We have had great cell service from Verizon, much better than we
previously had with SprintPCS. The phone works around the bay
and in our hilly North Berkeley neighborhood (the old Sprint
phone didn't get a connection there). The only places where the
phone is dead is in Tilden Park and in the basement of the YMCA.
We pay $35 for the first phone and $15 for the second (plus
taxes) for 250 minutes per phone. There may be a cheaper
Verizon plan available.
Its pretty useful for all sorts of things, not just emergencies.
A one-minute phone call to order a pizza on the way home or
check on any additional groceries to buy can save a lot of time
going back and forth, so I would aim for a minimal plan with say
60+ minutes a month - keep the conversations to a minimum and
you won't spend money on extra minutes.
John
Verizon seems to have the best coverage in the area. I can't use
my cingular (used to be PacBell) phone in the basement of Barrows
and the only people who can are those with verizon.
Myriam
Hi - We were in the same boat. Despite what everyone told us (ie
once we had a phone we'd use it all the time) we only talk about
1/2 hour per month - if that. So i needed the CHEAPEST plan
possible - really just for emergencies or if i'm late/lost. I
chose a prepaid cellular plan - Verizon's Free Up. You have to
buy a phone (currently $99 w/$30 rebate). Then you buy minutes
in increments of $30, $50 and up. The minutes are good for 60
days. We only buy the $30 card so we have been paying $15/month
since January! We love it! No contracts, no roaming, nothing.
We have a designated phone number and voicemail. The
only 'downside' is we have to remember to purchase more minutes
every two months (they have stores everywhere - either Verizon
or RadioShack, online or simply via an 800#). The phone begins
to remind you to 'Re-Up' (every time you make a call) when you
have about 5 days left. And they have signon bonuses - we got
1500 weekend/eve minutes (and still have like 1200 left) and 100
daytime minutes when we bought our phone. Good luck!
Julie
If you only want a number that people can reach you in an
emergency, a pager might better serve you. Service plans are
very cheap, and you will have peace of mind. You may also keep
them ''powered on'' in an airplane and at the hospital, and they
seem to be connected better, that is to say you will get the
page more relilably than that with a cellular call.
Ilan
We have Cingular and have been very happy with our service,
rates, etc. I would not recommend Sprint. When we had it,
service was sketchy and customer service was horrible (long
waits on the phone and/or in the store).
Brightstar
I have a Verizon Free-up account for my cell phone service.
What's nice about it is that I just buy minutes to use with the
phone (the minutes are good for 60 days before expiring)
and can spend as little as $30 every 60 days for about 80
minutes (depends on current rates.) I don't know what it
costs to set up the initial account/get the phone/etc., since I
won the phone/set-up in a drawing (and if I hadn't won it, I
might not have gotten a cell at all) but it might be worth
checking into. I keep the phone in case of emergency, and I
find it a convenience at times when there is no pay phone
available. The Verizon web site has lots of info about the
account.
Patty
I just got a cell phone for the same reason and chose the AT&T
Free 2 Go plan. I got a Nokia phone and the first 70 minutes of
air time for about $42.00--no activation fees et al because I
bought it through Phoneshark.com. The Free 2 Go plan has you
buy minutes as you need them, but check out Phoneshark.com for
complete details on the plan and savings. My husband looked at
a lot of plans and this one suited my needs (the same as yours)
best.
Judy
Sept 2002
Which cell phone service works best in Alameda? Alameda
provides notoriously bad reception, but one service must work
better than the rest. Who is it? Any help will be gratefully
accepted.
melvicarr
I live in Alameda and have just recently upgraded my AT&T (formerly Cellular
One service) phone. It is a bit better...but not a lot. It's really a
result of the fact
that there are no 'cells' or transmitters in Alameda, from what I
understand--the city council wouldn't let anyone put any up. So you really get
better reception the closer you are to an Oakland transmitter. Note that you
can get continuous cell phone reception through the Posey Tube--but that you
lose your radio reception. Crazy.
Jennie
Cell Phone Service in Berkeley
September 2002
hi, i'm looking for a cell phone service in berkeley--
and t-mobile looks like a good service but no one has
commented on it yet--does anyone have any experiences
with them (good or bad)?
thanks!
joanne
I use Tracfone and am very pleased. I bought the reconditioned
phone for $30 and only buy the minutes I need. I paid $100 for a
full year's service and 120 minutes, and when I run out of
minutes will buy more without losing the phone number before my
year is up. I haven't paid a cell phone bill since February!
And did it all on the website.
Rebecca
Try Tracfone! I've had Tracfone service for a year, because I
wanted exactly what you're describing. It's like having a
payphone with you. They've changed their rates a bit (and
upgraded the phones to all-digital, so the phone is no longer as
cheap as the one I got), but basically you buy their phone
(mine's a Nokia) and prepaid time -- minimum 30 minutes for
$17.99. After that, the only requirement is to buy more time
every 60 days. If you don't, you can easily start service
again, but they don't guarantee you'll get the same phone
number. That's less than $9 per month. Plus, if you haven't
used up your time in the 60 days (I never have) it's carried
over -- you do not lose it if you don't use it. I have not had
any problems with the service, nor have I encountered
any ''blind'' areas. The website is www.tracfone.com.
We've had great cell service from Verizon, much better than we
previously had with SprintPCS. The phone works around the bay
and in our hilly North Berkeley neighborhood (the old Sprint
phone didn't get a connection there). The only places where the
phone is dead is in Tilden Park and in the basement of the YMCA.
We pay $35 for the first phone and $15 for the second (plus
taxes) for 250 minutes per phone. There may be a cheaper
Verizon plan available.
Its pretty useful for all sorts of things, not just emergencies.
A one-minute phone call to order a pizza on the way home or
check on any additional groceries to buy can save a lot of time
going back and forth, so I would aim for a minimal plan with say
60+ minutes a month - keep the conversations to a minimum and
you won't spend money on extra minutes.
John
Verizon seems to have the best coverage in the area. I can't use
my cingular (used to be PacBell) phone in the basement of Barrows
and the only people who can are those with verizon.
Myriam
Hi - We were in the same boat. Despite what everyone told us (ie
once we had a phone we'd use it all the time) we only talk about
1/2 hour per month - if that. So i needed the CHEAPEST plan
possible - really just for emergencies or if i'm late/lost. I
chose a prepaid cellular plan - Verizon's Free Up. You have to
buy a phone (currently $99 w/$30 rebate). Then you buy minutes
in increments of $30, $50 and up. The minutes are good for 60
days. We only buy the $30 card so we have been paying $15/month
since January! We love it! No contracts, no roaming, nothing.
We have a designated phone number and voicemail. The
only 'downside' is we have to remember to purchase more minutes
every two months (they have stores everywhere - either Verizon
or RadioShack, online or simply via an 800#). The phone begins
to remind you to 'Re-Up' (every time you make a call) when you
have about 5 days left. And they have signon bonuses - we got
1500 weekend/eve minutes (and still have like 1200 left) and 100
daytime minutes when we bought our phone. Good luck!
Julie
I use AT&T Wirelss and I'm very happy. I am a doula and I'm on
call most of the time, so good service is a necessity for me. I
used to use Cingular but found the service was very spotty --
switched to AT&T and I'm glad I did.
Laurel
We're in the cellphone business, so I borrowed a Cingular phone
for a few days for my wife before buying service (T-Mobile &
Cingular use the same system and antennas, so you will get
exactly the same coverage). I'd heard horror stories about
Cingular, but we generally got good coverage where ever we
went. The T-Mobile service plans are great deal if the service
works for you- make sure you buy your phone from a reputable
dealer that will allow you to return it if it doesn't work.
lfrey
Cell Phone Service
I just did a lot of research on this and decided on Nextel. T-
mobile currently uses Cingular's towers- I had quite a few
problems with Cingular having little service in many areas-
particularly here in Alameda
Juliette
July 2000
I'd appreciate hearing about whether the rest of you have as much trouble
with cellphone service in Berkeley as I do. Until a year ago I worked in
San Francisco and only used my cellphone occasionally in Berkeley. Now that
I'm based here, I find that my service (Cellular One) is almost impossible,
especially North of University Ave. I have had constant problems with poor
reception (I can hear the other person, they can't hear me) on MLK,
Shattuck, Marin, not to mention in the hills proper. This has gotten to the
point of being a family and client joke -- and that's no laughing matter.
I assume the problem is with antenna coverage. CellOne told me they were
putting a new antenna on Tolman Hall that would help, but there's been no
change. Do other Cellular One customers have the same experience? Do
subscribers to Sprint, GTE or PacBell? In short, which companies provide
reliable service in North Berkeley?
Timothy
I've been very disappointed with my digital Cellular One service using a
Motorola Star TAC 7797.One day, I tried an A-B comparison in central north
Berkeley with a friend who has the equivalent Star TAC phone but GTE digital
service--and GTE was noticeably clearer, better. Can't speak to
coverage, but none work particularly well in the Berkeley hills. When I
got C-1, I was told they were the best, Sprint the worst, but I tend to
think that GTE is likely to be better.
I'm not sure if this is helpful or not... I recently got PacBell PCS
and am largely pretty pleased with my range. It doesn't work in the
basement of Barrows (but then again, nothing much does) but it does
work at the center of campus, up near Strawberry Canyon and Lawrence
Hall of Science, in Tilden Park and in the Oakland Hills. I've got
their free phone (the Nokia 5190) so I am not using anything fancy. I
was told, admittedly by the guy at PacBell, that the reception in the
Oakland Hills for PacBell PCS was quite good, and have found this to
be true. I don't use the phone a whole lot, but my husband uses the
same exact phone (we got their deal with two phones and a hundred
minutes) and he's called me from various locations in the
Berkeley/Oakland Hills and from as far away as the Marin Headlands
with good reception and no problem getting a dial tone.
Kevin
We have had good luck with GTE, now Verizon, with the only real problem
being deep in Tilden. The older analog phone we have is slightly better
than our digital one, which may mean that their analog coverage is better.
Nathaniel
I have GTE service and I have the same problems you are having. Especially
when I am in North Berkeley. I live near Colusa Ave and last night called a
friend at her home on Santa Fe. This is a only about four blocks and not exactly
in the hills. My call was clear but then unexpectedly dropped. This happen twice
in a row. I was not even moving. I have a friend living in Orinda and using
Pac Bell.
She says she does not have these problems very often as I do. I would like
to hear from other Pac Bell users to see if this holds true.
lynn
CellularOne reception: it's dreadful in the North Berkeley and
Kensington areas as mentioned. It seems to me, now that I recently
renewed my commitment to them, that it's considerably worse than it used
to be. I haven't explored any alternatives, but I'm equally interested
in what suggestions get posted.
victoria-g
I have pac bell, and it works in North Berkeley, but badly. Foggy
reception on the Arlington, and no service at all in Tilden Park.
D. Banks/ R. Porter
re Comparison of Cell Phone Reception in Berkeley
re Long distance
Please check out http//www.decide.com
For all matters concerning cellphones or long distance.
They have unbiased comparisons of services and rates.
Roger
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