wrote:
>me@privacy.net wrote:
>>
>>> Yes, you misunderstood. What "Gold" buys you is that even the lowest
>>> cost refill is good for a full year.
>>
>> Crap!
>>
>> So I must buy $100 refill cards to get lowest rate of
>> 10 cents/min?
>>
>> <sigh> I thought so but please confirm again
>This is true. You must buy the $100 card. Or cut your losses now, and
>switch to PagePlus, a Verizon MVNO where the _most_ expensive minutes
>are 10 cents, and minutes go as low as 4 cents. Much better coverage
>too. But a yearly minimum of $30 ($10 every 120 days), rather than the
>T-Mobile minimum of $10 a year (for "Gold").
Ilogical crap without knowing usage.
First, look at the big picture in terms of coverage..
California coverage means NOTHING to those not using the phone in
California.
So where you use your phone is what determines the coverage you need.
I've been using T-Mobile prepaid since it started maybe 6 years ago,
and have never had trouble with coverage between Illinois and Florida.
If you don't intend to go where some joker pimping a particular
company says there is better coverage, but want to brag about coverage
in places you never go to, or are insecure enough to think "I *might*
go there sometime, and what cell phone coverage will I have?" then
price doesn't matter anyway. Same goes if you use your phone for
business travel - you pay for coverage.
And get a sat phone too, in case you go sailing in the middle of the
Atlantic.
Easiest way to determine if the coverage you want is provided by a
cell company is not to look at a coverage map, but simply ask other
people who go where you go. Nearly everybody has a cell phone now.
Ask at least 3-5 people using a particular service, because some will
just lie - people often lie because their ego tells them that what
they have is the best, regardless of reality.
Other people like to complain, so they'll tell you all about no
coverage or dropped calls.
You end up with a reasonable version of the truth.
Secondly - and this is what fools many people - for those who don't
use a cell phone heavily, cost per minute is meaningless.
Prepaid plans are for light users. For those people just cut to the
chase and see what yearly cost is.
Here's some real examples.
******
Wife's T-Mobile prepaid.
She uses the phone maybe every other day to call from the road or
store, and yaks with the kids when we are on vacation.
It's our goto phone when we're together on the road.
There is no roaming charge - any time, any where.
No texting, just call and talk when you want to.
Year 1 - $100 for 1200 minutes (some kind of special deal)
Year 2 - $100 for 1000 minutes, bringing it to up to about 1600
minutes because you keep unused minutes.
Years 3-6 - $50 a year.
I just looked at her account, due for renewal in August to keep the
minutes, and she has 634 minutes left.
Think about it. That's 10 1/2 hours of yakking left.
So it'll be $50 bucks in August for another year.
Adds up to maybe $70 a year so far, and going down.
******
My T-Mobile prepaid.
Year 1 - $100 for 1000 minutes.
Year 2 - $10.
Year 3 - $10.
I looked and I have 793 minutes left.
Just did the re-up last month, and saw how the $10 minutes are more
expensive. Did I buy a larger amount to save money on cost per
minute? Heck no. I'm basically keeping minutes from 3 years ago
alive. We take this phone with us on vacation to use minutes.
I hardly ever use it, but like having it when I'm out of the house
since it's hard to find a pay phone nowadays.
Adds up to $40 a year so far, and going down.
******
Son's U.S. Cellular.
I did the on-line pay for him until recently, so know a little about
it. He uses texting, and some fancy stuff I don't know about or care
about. He never complained about coverage from Illinois to eastern
Tennessee, but roaming charges are real expensive.
I make him take my T-Mobile prepaid phone when goes with his
girlfriend to Tennessee to visit her family. A lot cheaper.
He was paying an average of about $100 a month for about 4 years.
That's 5 grand if you think of it that way. I do.
I think they tied him in with 2 year contracts.
I recall he uses about 600 minutes per month.
I was on his case about that all the time, and when it was time to
renew he squeezed them for a plan that's costing him about $50 a month
that suits him.
Here's the bottom line.
Prepaid is for light users.
Light users should figure yearly cost, not cost per-minute.
T-Moblile is very frugal for light users.
Paying more for coverage at Squaw Valley if you don't go to Squaw
valley is a complete waste of money.
Signing up for a contracted monthly plan when you can do the same
thing cheaper every year with a prepaid plan is a total waste of
money.
Coverage isn't rocket science. Ask around about it.
Almost everybody can clue you in on that.
One other thing - renewing once per year is 3 times better than
renewing 3 times a year. Less chance of losing your accumulated
minutes because you forgot to renew in time.
One more thing, that most probably aren't aware of, and will fit a
segment of cell users.
T-Mobile has 2 prepaid plans, one is Pay as You Go, which I use and
described above.
I just noticed they have another plan called Pay per Day.
Seems you have to sign on to an account to get to this description, so
don't click unless you have an account.
https://support.my.t-mobile.com/doc/tm23610.xml#5
From reading this, it looks like you can get unlimited non-prime-time
minutes for $30 a month *if* you're calling another T-Mobile plan
phone. Looks real good for inveterate yakkers and lovers who talk a
lot after 7 PM..
Basically it costs $1 for each day you use the phone.
Here's what it says about minute charges.
"When am I charged the $0.10 per minute charge with my T-Mobile
Prepaid Pay By The Day rate plan?
You will be charged $0.10 for any domestic calls to or from numbers
that are not other T-Mobile customers between the hours of 7:00 a.m.
and 6:59 p.m."
--Vic
>cost refill is good for a full year.
Crap!