Web development , php , ajax , symfony, framework, zend
In: web resources
20 Jan 2010
On Friday, Verizon and AT&T both dropped the price of their unlimited voice plans. Yesterday was the first day that existing customers could switch to these new plans, and luckily BillShrink has put together a nice chart comparing the different U.S. mobile carriers side-by-side.
Despite lipspeak from carriers, trying to figure out the information using official websites (or even worse, the rate brochures) can still be confusing for consumers who might not understand what makes a phone a smartphone with a smartphone data plan and what makes a phone just a regular data phone.
Here is BillShrink’s Ultimate Cell Phone Plan Comparison Chart to clear matters up:
Please note, this chart assumes you want unlimited text messaging as part of your plan. For some wireless carriers, like AT&T, if you can stand having fewer tha 200 texts a month, you can shave another $15 off your bill. Unsurprisingly, the two largest U.S. carriers — Verizon and AT&T, are also the most expensive. The equivalent “all you can talk, text and data” plans cost $20 more a month respectively for a single smartphone line and up to $30 more a month for a family plan.
Tags: att, billshrink, verizon
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4 Responses to Wireless Plans: Verizon vs. AT&T vs. T-Mobile vs. Sprint [Comparison Chart]
Josh
March 20th, 2010 at 9:25 am
Yes a wirless has the right to drop you from their network. A good example is when you roam. If half of your minutes are roaming for 2 months straight they have the right to kick you off. Another way you can get kicked off is if you call more than 3 times a month to customer service and complain about service all the time.
wreckless dave
March 21st, 2010 at 3:45 am
dell.com
krimsonflames
March 27th, 2010 at 3:07 pm
If by Spanish u mean Spain, then skype.com charges €0.253 to mobiles and it was the cheapest i could find. If this is some form of personal relationship then the best option would be skype-to-skype, which is free.
musicman32117
March 29th, 2010 at 10:29 am
The incident of overpowering amps is not here. The
source of power is the initial monitor issue. To use a
pre-amp, private generator or battery line source could
mix ohms because that is the description of output watt
command. You do not intend to master the signal. To use
a mixer board or a p.a. monitor board would be for live play.
To play in a light venue you do not even enter the realm of
exploding your lines, which are the first thing to go. The
wiring is new, the power is steady, the output is clear and
to keep those in that ratio you need play within household
watt command levels, say under 20 decibels. 20 decibels
of house watts is equal to turning up the radio full blast.
You most likely will be right there if you keep the sound clean.
http://www.hitachi.com