What are the Best Cell Phone Services in the US? 239
James Hewfanger asks: "Cnet.co.uk has run an article on the five best cell phone services in the UK. These include a text-based service that gets you the number of a licensed cab company in London, Google Maps and Gmail on your phone, a service that can tell what artist and song you're listening to, an online service that backs up all your cell phone contacts and a text-based service that answers any question you can throw at it. What, however, are the five best cell phone services in the US?" Wirefly's cell phone plan comparison tool gives a good up-to-date look of all cell phone plans on the market.
TellMe (1-800-555-TELL) (Score:4, Informative)
Driving Directions
Sports
Travel (flights, hotels,
Movies (via fandango)
Weather
All voice activated with very good support for keypad.
Historically they had free directory assistance.
at times they had traffic information, it's now 511 (run by them)
They run 1-800-555-1212 (toll free directory assistance)
TellMe now has Yellowpages Search (Score:2)
However, I find the most usefull feature is their driving directions. It's gotten me out of a jam many times. Only downside is that if you're lost, you need to find out what city you're in (which can be a bit hard on a country road in the middle of nowhere) and yo
Google (Score:5, Informative)
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I use this a lot, and it's fantastic. I'm on a text plan so I don't worry about the cost (google doesn't charge anything). You have to be with one of the major carriers though, when I tried to use this on US Cellular [uscc.com] it wouldn't work because they don't support the five digit text numbers. Google SMS [google.com] is a great way to get info on the go and has been my "yellow pages" for a long time.
On the subject of other cell services, I used to use Infone [wikipedia.org] before they went under at the beginning of last year and I haven'
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I've done this for the past 3-4 years on SprintPCS. If you have your vision plan...you can tether your computer to your phone. They don't really like you to do that, but, if you don't use too
Jesus christ (Score:2)
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The google service is very useful, my favorite use for it is to google telephone numbers that ring me, if they are a land based or business phone it gives you the goods on who is calling. Also, can be useful for area codes.
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We have those here? (Score:5, Funny)
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Oh, I can imagine all kinds of useful services (or rather, functions) to have on a cellphone (esp. one combined with a PDA). The problem is that this will probably never happen in the USA. Here, your cellphone is tied to your carrier, and crippled by them, so that all the extra functions and capabilities are controlled by them, not by you. Want to play a game? That'll cost $10/month. Want a different ringtone? That'
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KFed all the way!
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how do they do that?? (Score:3, Informative)
Hearing a song and not knowing who sings it or what it's called can be very annoying. Fortunately, Shazam provides a service that lets you hold your phone up to any song playing and it will then text you back the artist and track name in a matter of minutes.
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"How does that work?", I wonder....clever stuff.
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if you have a question that you need answering, AQA is the mobile service for you. AQA, which stands for any question answered, is a text-based service that literally answers any question you can think of. We asked it 'which was better, a CMOS or CCD sensor?' -- amazingly it came back with a half-decent answer.
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In the words of Captain Darling himself, "Clever. Clever. Clever.".
I wonder if it's scalable.
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Well, was very clever of me. I was feeling quite smug really, but unfortunately, I was wrong. The quote would correctly be attributed to Lt. the Honorable George Colhurst St. Barleigh. I know you all knew that, but it had to be corrected, if only for the record.
I'm so embarressed.
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Flurry (Score:3, Informative)
Best five services in Japan... (Score:4, Informative)
1. Deco Mail: most of the new phones now have HTML mail and large libraries of animated emoticons and the like - wifey's has over 1,000, plus lots more downloadable free. They can also be forwarded to PC mail clients and displayed successfully.
2. NaviTime: doesn't just tell you where to go, but copes with which exit from the subway station to get, if a taxi would be faster than trains, even which carriage to board to be closest to the exit!
3. Napster: well, maybe not.
4. iPot: mobile phone in granny's kettle so you can get an email if she doesn't use it for a day.
5. Anti-bullying kiddie phones [wireless-watch.com]: junior points camera at bully/perv, sounds the alarm, and parent gets a photo plus GPS coordinates, etc.
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OK, word association exercise. Think about the meaning of iPot.
Now read this sentence:
4. iPot: mobile phone in granny's kettle so you can get an email if she doesn't use it for a day.
Hands up if you had to read it three times to get what it was actually about because on the first two reads you thought it was some kind of weird stoner talk?
Come on people... (Score:3, Informative)
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Relax and please remove the stick. In the US, the term "service" can mean the "service" itself, or the provider thereof. A cell phone carrier is frequently referred to as a "service" as is the availability of their signal in a particular location. Phones in the US often display a message to the effect of "No Service" when a carrier's signal cannot be detected. "Cell pho
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To actually answer the question though, the answer for me (in the UK) would be "none of the above" - with a web browser and RSS reader in the phone, the need for many of these sort of services goes away (OK, not the likes of "identify this tune for me", but I've never really felt the need).
Verizon! (Score:3, Funny)
The problem and solution to cellular communication (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The problem and solution to cellular communicat (Score:2)
Minutes? That reminds me of the AOL days when they still charged by the minute. I got hit with huge $300 bills a couple of times.
Now I use Sprint [sprint.com] which gives me unlimited EV-DO mobile broadband for $60 a month (unlimited time -- with a two year contract -- which works 98% of the time). And I use MetroPCS [metropcs.com] for norm
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Re:The problem and solution to cellular communicat (Score:2)
The future is wireless, resistance is futile (Score:2)
When people say there will never be seamless (nationwide / global) high speed wireless communications has not seen the big picture. It is not if this will happen but when. We are getting closer and closer ever day. I know many people, like myself, that forgo
Coverate at the Summit of Mt Whitney (Score:2)
Just check Consumer Reports (Score:2)
I think they do this every year or so.
Either sign on at consumerreports.org, or check it out at the library.
The answer is... (Score:3, Interesting)
4INFO (Score:2)
sports scores
player stats
stock quotes
wifi hotspots
package tracking
weather
yellow pages
news
flight status
hotel reservations
city search
TV Guide
movie show times
drink recipes
price lookup
jokes
horoscopes
pickup lines
celebrity gossip
music charts
ringtones
wallpapers
games
More and higher quality services than Google (46645) and Yahoo (92466).
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Rumkin.com! (Score:2)
GMail for phones is also wicked. I have not yet confirmed that my phone picks up the POP3 messages from work I have tied into that GMail account... If so I could practically work from the phone.
Yahoo! Go looks like the next best thing, but is not yet available for my Samsung SPH-A920
This phone pretty m
The best service won't work while driving (Score:2)
Let the phone die already (Score:2)
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Problem is, there's no way to test Verizon's coverage here without actually committing to buy a phone (unless this Cingular LG phone can be moved over to Verizon's network).
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Telepathy. (Score:2)
ZYB works in the US as well (Score:3, Interesting)
Runar Reistrup, ZYB
voice-based services (Score:2, Interesting)
Google Local: 877-520-3463. My favorite. You give it a city, category, and/or business name. It speaks or texts you the results, and connects you to the business.
Tell Me: 800-555-tell (8355). I mostly use it for driving directions, but it has myriad other features.
511: Traffic, public transit info (only handy if you're in the SF Bay Area or around Sacramento).
wap.trimet.org (Portland, OR) (Score:2)
Trimet homepage [trimet.org]
My Experience (Score:2)
Verizon - billing problems, poor coverage in SE Ohio.
Sprint - billing problems, poor coverage in SE Ohio.
T-Mobile - billing problems, poor coverage in SE Ohio.
YMMV
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To be fair, you do need to specify if you had AT&T's GSM service or not, because they also sold an awful CDMA service for a while. My previous employer foolishly signed a long term deal with AT&T maybe 7 years ago or so and got put on AT&T's CDMA service. After AT&T got bought out by Cingular, they began to phase out the CDMA service, as well they should because it was awful. I lost track of
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511 in Florida (Score:2)
Best Service in the US (Score:2)
Best. Service. EVAR. (Score:2)
I can call my credit union's self service telephone and do anything I can do in front of a teller or online. I can check balances and transfer money and get cash advances or even a loan over the phone.
Berry411 / Beyond411 (Score:2)
Wow! (Score:2)
Is P = NP?
Does this (description of a Turing Machine) TM halt?
What is BusyBeaver(100) ?
Give a proof of the Riemann hypothesis. (Not in the form of a question? How about "Is the Riemann hypothesis true?")
Of course, it doesn't say the answers will be correct (or verifiable).
To ask is to ASSUME an answer (Score:2)
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Of course it matters! How else is he going to get more Big Issues sent down to him?
Kind of an offtopic rant (Score:2)
For example, when someone calls me, I usually ignore it because I'm a crotchety type who doesn't want to talk to you. You get my voicemail, and now I have to clear it out because I'm not interested in what you have to say.
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The one I work for (obviously)! (Score:2)
Slifter [slifter.com], a mobile local product search. We search real store inventory near you, nationwide. If we're thin on the local results, we shove in online results.
Available interfaces
J2ME, hit slifter.com from your mobile browser. Redirects to XHTML MP if we don't think it'll work.
XHTML MP, hit slifter.com from your mobile browser. Force by viewing http://slifter.com/mp/ [slifter.com]
PC web browser, hit slifter.com from your web browser. Force by viewing http://slifter.com/pc/ [slifter.com]
SMS text keywords plus zip code
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Spoken like someone who isn't a Nextel customer.
They are one company now, but they've done almost nothing in integrating the two separate networks. Trust me, there's a reason they went and came out with a hybrid Sprint/Nextel phone.
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I first signed up with Nextel in 2001, when they were business-oriented. For about two years, they were very good except that I could not get coverage on the few occasions I went to a rural area. When I did have a problem, the customer service was top notch. Then it all went downhill. Their customer services started sucking big time, the service did not improve, and now, in the city, there are blackout times (or so it seems...if I
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I too used to like the durability to the phone. The first one I had was an i80s. No joke, one time I got angry and threw it as hard as I could against a concrete wall. The antenna was impacted into the phone and could not be removed, but the stinkin phone still worked! Unbelievable! They don't make phones like that anymore. But as a result of that phone, I will always get Motorola phones, regardless of
Re:on the cheap (Score:5, Funny)
Verizon PP (Score:2)
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http://www.t-mobile.com/shop/plans/default.aspx?p
their site seems to be running fairly slow at the moment. This is for the US, I'm not sure what the t-mobile prepaid plans are like for the rest of the world.
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Great news, though. I started out with the $100 card. Good to know that I'll definitely be able to rollover if I don't use up all 1,000.
Very strange that th
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Uh....WOOSH! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Uh....WOOSH! (Score:4, Insightful)
The Slashdot Godwin? (Score:4, Funny)
And thus we are introduced to the /. addendum to Godwin's Law:
"As the length of any thread on Slashdot increases, the probability of a comparison involving Microsoft and/or Bill Gates approaches one."
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WOOSH yourself! Obviously the answer to the question is "attractively priced/delivered voice plans".
Re:Uh....WOOSH! (Score:4, Interesting)
Basically I text them the name of a local train station (local to which ever pub I am in usually) and they text me back the list of trains on the departure board and what time they leave.
So I can leave the pub at the last possible moment and still miss one and wait an hour.
This is AMERICA, pal!! (Score:2)
Uh... sorry. I think I've been in the South too long.
Re:uh (Score:5, Funny)
next post.....
Oh, BTW I am posting this using my Cingular data card
*head explodes*
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OH... Services.... I'm an idiot (Score:2, Insightful)
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Do you mean $40 for T-Mobile UK SIM card? They're now £5 (~$10), with £5 pounds worth of air time (ie, they're free). And Vodafone are doing free SIM cards if you order them online (at least they were recently) - even if you buy them in a shop they're still only £5. I think pretty much every other provider in the UK is also in that $0-£5 price range. You'd have to
They don't seem to cooperate. (Score:2)
I don't think so; but one of the other benefits of T-Mobile is that they will unlock your phone on request, and I think they will do so even if you're not off contract, just as long as you've paid your bill and are in good standing for six months or so. I'm not sure because I was month-to-month by the time I had them unlock mine, but it was no big deal. They sent me an email with the instructions on how to do it, which involv
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They have - there are hundreds of places and websites in the UK that will unlock phones for you for £10-£20.
There's also a free website that'll give you the codes for certain nokia phones.
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Verizon uses CDMA, as does Sprint, Alltel, US Cellular and most rural small providers.
AT&T/Cingular use GSM as does T-Mobile.
I don't think any of the big companies are really selling phones with analog capabilities any more. They all w
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What kind of pants do you wear?
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I just want voice. I want an attractive phone, voice only (I work in a DoD contractor facility, picture phones not allowed).
I'd love to see a RAZR formfactor with voice only. Maybe SMS as well, but nothing else.
Anyone got suggestions, especially those with SF Valley knowledge?
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If GSM (at least, not sure about CDMA), check web/manual. If there's no menu option to control 'delay before voicemail', there'll be a #code... along the lines of "#[two digits]*[seconds before divert]#". Although most networks won't let you set it above 30 seconds or so.
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However, this article is about third-party cell phone services that you access through your cell phone provider. Sorry there.