Cell Phone Lossage
Sep. 12th, 2002 09:34 pmI have two cellular phones. One has been bolted into my car since 1987; the other is a newer Nokia digital phone. The car phone works; the two-year-old Nokia needs to be replaced because the power switch is broken. The previous portable cellular phone also only lasted two years.
The problem? If I had two digital phones I could severely cut down my cellular bills. I have astronomical cell phone bills right now; I could lower them to $60/month.
The gotcha? To install a setup in my car to cradle a portable phone in a way similar to the working-but-analog car phone it'd cost me around $350.00. Right now I don't have $350.00.
On the other hand, AT&T Wireless refuses to let me have a decent calling plan because they don't want to support the analog-but-working car phone.
I'm not sure what to do here.
The problem? If I had two digital phones I could severely cut down my cellular bills. I have astronomical cell phone bills right now; I could lower them to $60/month.
The gotcha? To install a setup in my car to cradle a portable phone in a way similar to the working-but-analog car phone it'd cost me around $350.00. Right now I don't have $350.00.
On the other hand, AT&T Wireless refuses to let me have a decent calling plan because they don't want to support the analog-but-working car phone.
I'm not sure what to do here.
no subject
Date: 2002-09-13 02:01 am (UTC)As for why not just go with a handset, it's the idea of me driving with one hand fumbling for the phone while trying to drive with the other. Right now I've got a real-sized handset I can cradle between my ear and shoulder, thus enabling me to keep both hands on the wheel. I can also reach down to the same spot and dial without looking away from traffic. I can't do that on a cell phone that's floating around loose in my car.
Ear buds also don't work for me (or my mother; it seems to be hereditary).
no subject
Date: 2002-09-13 10:17 am (UTC)There are some speakerphone setups that let you pipe the sound out to a your radio and put the phone where you can reach it to key in the phone number.
Can you point me to the $350 phone rig?
no subject
Date: 2002-09-13 10:53 am (UTC)The official Nokia car kit, name brand, handset - cradle - voice mike in window post - $150, $200 installed at any car electronics shop. $350 is outrageous.
The car kit I have is a speakerphone cradle that plugs into the 12v socket. It cost me $20. Others (like the FM radio) are $40-$100. I've also been happy with real full-size headsets (2.5 mm jacks), same kind you use on work phones, and the Nokia to headset adapter is $10. Earbuds are a joke. You can use a mechanical holder with it (under $10 anywhere) if you want it to hold still. They make cradles which would let you use any RJ-11 house phone - costs $100 - for that Hello Kitty car phone.
I also have a AT&T Nokia 5160 which is useless to me. Want it? A broken power button may be a user-level repair - if I look at it for 5 seconds I can tell. Most shops will repair older
no subject
Date: 2002-09-13 05:32 pm (UTC)I just got my KLIV direct deposit today. I know what I'm doing tonight.
no subject
Date: 2002-09-13 05:35 pm (UTC)I'm guessing the bimbo at the AT&T shop was snowing me because, for whatever reason, she didn't want to do business with me. (The good saleslady/store manager was with other customers and was clearly trying to get her incompetent staffers to do some work.)