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Many of the major cell phone providers like Sprint, Cingular, and T-Mobile maintain their own retail outlets in addition to independent cell phone dealers. These stores offer wireless phones with service plan activation with prices varying from free to several hundred dollars. While these stores do offer
the convenience of getting your phone today, many consumers are turning to online sites to purchase their new cell phone plans. Most cell phone comparison sites offer free 2 day shipping, and additional rebates that can lead to savings of up to $250 on a cell phone when compared to one purchased at a retail store.
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5 Cell Phone Myths
Myth #1: It's OK to use your cell phone in-flight. Not exactly. As
I write this, the major carriers still forbid you to use your cell phone
on a plane, citing Federal Communication Commission rules. In fact, a 2003
study by the UK Civil Aviation Authority determined standard cell phone
use can make a compass freeze or overshoot its actual magnetic bearing. A
wireless device can also interfere with an aircraft's navigational
equipment. (Other studies have not found such a strong link, leading many
passengers to believe the real reason airlines had banned cell phones was
to boost profits from their onboard satellite phones.) Myth #2:
Onboard wireless is new. Hardly. People have been communicating
wirelessly from the main cabin since there have been wireless devices
(never mind those overpriced satellite phones). A few years ago, I
reported that the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) was looking the
other way while air travelers were firing up their personal digital
assistants (PDAs) in-flight and checking e-mail. I have personally used a
cell phone on a plane, and I have flown next to people who have used their
cell phones, particularly when they are over a populated area or flying at
a lower altitude. What is new is that the FAA appears ready to sanction
equipment designed to send and receive wireless signals onboard.
Myth #3: Onboard wireless is cheaper than old satellite phones.
Seat-back phones charged $1 a minute or more, and the connection quality
was often less than spectacular. No one knows how the new onboard cell
phone service will be priced, but you can bet that the airlines and the
technology firms that were used to install the onboard cellular receivers
will be vigilant in recovering their costs. As it stands, users of onboard
cell phones will either be subjected to roaming charges of some kind or
they will have to use special equipment to access the special onboard
cellular signal. So if you're counting on the new phones being cheaper
than the old ones, don't.
Myth #4: Onboard wireless means your cell phone works on the plane.
Not even close. It doesn't even mean anything on the plane is
wireless-enabled. Consult your airline's Web site carefully before making
plans to connect wirelessly. For example, KLM just began offering text
messaging and e-mail on its Boeing 777s, which operate on routes to New
York, San Francisco, Sao Paulo, Cape Town, Dubai, Tokyo, Shanghai, Beijing
and Manila. A cursory glance at the service might lead you to believe that
you can use your cell phone to send messages. Not true. In KLM's case, you
use your in-seat, in-flight-entertainment system to send the messages at a
cost of $2.50 each. Other airlines have installed onboard high-speed
wireless Internet services, but haven't added the cellular equipment.
Myth #5: An onboard wireless connection means you'll be more
productive. This is perhaps the biggest misconception about onboard
phones — that somehow we won't be able to live without them (particularly
as business travelers). Don't count on it. A plane trip without a phone
may actually be the ideal time to focus on that presentation or report,
away from the interruptions of a ringing handset. True, cell phones can —
and do — make us more productive. But there's a time for everything. And
that includes a time to turn off your cell phone.
Understanding that onboard cell phones are a new and quickly evolving
technology which may help you decide whether to take your phone on your
next flight, or to turn it off and stay disconnected for the duration.
It's your call.
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