[ale] Living without a data plan how feasible is it

Calvin Harrigan calvin.harrigan at gmail.com
Fri Oct 17 11:15:12 EDT 2014


+1 for T-Mobile, especially for international travel.  Unlimited text, 
data, 20cents per minute back to the states from over 120 countries.  
Coverage oversees was surprisingly good.  No surprises, bill was exactly 
as expected.

On 10/17/2014 10:56 AM, Greg Clifton wrote:
> For some cheap plans, also consider Republic Wireless. They run on 
> Sprint Network, which seems to have pretty good coverage. You can only 
> use the phones that they sell, because they set the phones to ALWAYS 
> prefer WiFi. Then when you in a WiFi free zone, you can talk on the 
> Sprint network. This allows them to offer some very low priced plans 
> (incluing data) since you are rarely actually using Sprint's 
> bandwidth. If you are mostly in the city, you should haved no concerns 
> about either WiFi or Sprint coverage. The wife was on Sprint via 
> Kroger's iWireless for a couple of years, and we found that the 
> coverage was pretty good even out in the boonies.
>
> If you travel outside the USA, T-Mobile is definitely the way to go, 
> no data roaming charges. They also have a 4 phones for $100/month 
> plan, inclusive of unlimited talk, text and ample data for most mere 
> mortals.
>
> On Fri, Oct 17, 2014 at 10:19 AM, JD <jdp at algoloma.com 
> <mailto:jdp at algoloma.com>> wrote:
>
>     On 10/17/2014 08:42 AM, Charles Shapiro wrote:
>     > +1 for T-Mobile.  Buy your phone used on swappa
>     (http://swappa.com ).  A BYOD
>     > no-contract plan is currently $68 a month with 3 GB of data.
>
>     t-mobile has daily unlimited plans for pay-as-you-go people for
>     either $2/day or
>     $3/day for 3G. These have unlimited talk+text+data (though 2G data
>     is limiting
>     and non-secure alone).  If you don't need the phone too much,
>     enabling that from
>     the normal P-A-Y-G plan can save $$$hundreds yearly.  If you have wifi
>     everywhere, do you really **need** data when around ATL?
>
>     On travel, I enable 2G t-mobile for the 7 days I need it. $14 -
>     not bad. In a
>     new city or one I haven't been in recently, it is convenient and
>     saves hassles.
>
>     Paying 10x more for convenience has always been the way of the
>     world. No
>     different with cell phones, just like getting a 7-Eleven candy bar
>     is more
>     expensive than walmart or a beer at the GA-Dome.
>
>     Of course, some people need the "status" for their jobs and I
>     completely
>     understand that. After all, if you can't afford $1200/yr for a
>     family cell phone
>     plan, why should I let you install and configure $4M worth of
>     equipment into my
>     business?
>
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