Cell Phone Jail? No thanks.
Thursday, March 20th, 2008Last month I got out of my Sprint contract early. Now this is really my first time shopping around for phone service. Because of my poor/lack-of reception in my house, my provider options are limited to GSM networks like T-Mobile and AT&T. Well I narrowed my choices down to an iPhone or AT&T Tilt ($150 from Amazon.com), both are with AT&T service. The Tilt has Windows Mobile 6, GPS, WiFi, SD, full keyboard, and touchscreen but has video driver issues. The iPhone ($399 from apple/at&t) has an amazing UI and great media capabilities, but has a locked down OS and hard drive, virtual keyboard, and a slower data plan. AT&T in general has high priced plans, but I am willing to pay a little extra for the better phone/service capabilities.
The downside to both these phones (and all new phones) is of course the required two year contract. In fact, most cell phone companies require you to sign a contract even if you don’t need a new phone. What other industry requires you to sign a two-year contract? This really hurt me with Sprint. They had me sign a two year contract just to get off of my parents family plan and keep my number. When I moved, I found that I had little to no reception in my house. Since I don’t have and don’t want a land-line, this made life difficult. If I left Sprint early I would have to pay a $200 fee. Good thing that loophole came along when it did.
Another reason I don’t want to sign a contract is that the cell-phone industry is rapidly changing. Sure, new technology is always around the corner, but with phones running Google’s Android OS coming later this year, or even a 3G iPhone with a developer SDK. It’s all still up in the air at this point, so this is worst time to get locked into any phone or service.
Then I saw T-Mobile’s Flex Pay NO contract option. You can sign up with any of their regular plans and features (including data), pay the same monthly fee, but there is NO contract. As far as I know, no other company offers this. You don’t get any discount on a new phone, but you can usually find the phone you want on eBay for not much more than the phone company’s discounted price.
I ended up using my wife’s spare T-Mobile Shadow, a Windows Mobile 6 slide phone with a XT9 SureType (2 characters per button) keyboard, nice bright screen, SD card slot, and a decent dashboard UI. No touch screen, but I’ve found that it’s not really needed. Even if I had to buy it myself, it’s only $50-$100 more on eBay than T-Mobile’s subsidized price. As for the plan, I got the basic $30 plan and added the $5.99 T-MobileWeb T-Zones option, which after changing some proxy settings, you can get unlimited web access (EDGE is only worth six bucks IMO).
So a new phone, cheap monthy fee, and NO CONTRACT. I pre-pay each month, can change my plan or drop it at any time. If I want the latest and greatest phone that requires a contract, that option is still open to me at any time. If I have to move or something, I’m not stuck paying for a phone I can’t use. If a better deal comes along I can jump on it. All of this because I’m not in a contract. Don’t get put in cell phone jail.
