Terry Stockdale
Top Choices for August...

Cell Phone Upgrade Time

 
 

Last Fall, we upgraded my wife's cell phone from the older TDMA service to a GSM phone — and got one of the cool, new Motorola Razr V3 models in a deep blue color. We use Cingular for our cell phone service and wanted to stay with Cingular for coverage reasons in some of our travels.

Previously, I had looked at the Cingular web site a number of times. While it looks good on the surface, it seems very klunky and counter-intuitive, requiring the reentering of data a number of times. Also, as I told them, their button wording for "upgrades" always implied that I was actually taking action. In reality, nothing happened to the account until the final "checkout" step where I had to click a checkbox saying that I agreed with the terms and conditions and then click on an check-out-now button.

In contrast, dealing with the Cingular sales people on the telephone was a great pleasure.

Did I write that? Yes, I actually did -- and I told it to them, too.

Over the last couple months, I had made several visits to both Cingular affiliate stores and Cingular's own store in Baton Rouge. I had also been Cingularly unimpressed. <Pun Intended>

However, I still intended to stay with Cingular, even though I could have switched to another service for $0, and still gotten a Motorola Razr V3 for free, with another service. This type of deal is almost always through one of the affiliates like Let's Talk , who offers super phone deals on Cingular, Verizon, T-mobile, Sprint and others.

I checked out T-Mobile phones at Let's Talk, whose been doing a lot of television ads lately. They had pretty good deals, too. But, for Cingular cell phones, those deals were mainly for people who were changing from other cellphone companies or for people adding additional lines.

Before placing my upgrade order through the Cingular web site, I talked a Cingular sales person named Robert to check a few things. While I expected to lose all my bank of "rollover minutes" when I changed my individual plan into a family plan, I actually got to roll in 550 rollover minutes (which matched my monthly allowance of 550 minutes). The sales rep — a real Customer Service rep — ran me though some options and also told me that the best prices were on the web in their Upgrade My Phone section. He was right.

Cingular surprised me another time with great service. Although the web site showed that the phone would come by regular mail delivery, they actually shipped it FedEx and it got here overnight, even though it was late afternoon when we ordered it.

After getting the new phone, I called in to activate the new phone and to change my two individual plans to one family plan. This time I talked to Erin in Customer Service and was again very impressed. Activation of the phone went smoothly. She then noted that she had notes that I wanted to convert to the 550 Minute Family Plan, and did I still want to do that? I confirmed, and Bam!, it was done.

My wife's happy with her new phone and all is well with the world...

Get a FREE phone and compare rates at LetsTalk.com

Whoa! At September 29th, Let's Talk has the Motorola Razr V3 with a single line plan or a family plan from T-mobile, not for the $99.99 I paid (upgrading within Cingular), but for $0 and then I could get a $50 rebate! That's $150 better. Plus, their T-mobile family talk plan includes 700 minutes for the same price I'm paying Cingular for 550 minutes. Hummm...

It's a shame that the really sweet deals are for people who switch services. Of course, in the old days, we had to lose our phone number if we did that. Now, on the other hand, Federal law allows us to take our phone numbers with us to another carrier. That makes this competition all possible.

The process of updating the phone to all her phone numbers was easy, too. Or, it would have been if I hadn't had to replace the hard drive and reinstall everything again. In this case, I used the Motorola Phone Tools, which are a great little package.

Motorola phone tools will let you back up and restore your phone books. You can also synchronize the phone book and the phone's calendar with your Outlook contacts list and calendar.

Fortunately, Motorola treats Motorola Phone Tools as a "buy once" program, since my old version was something like v2.0. Using the program's built-in live update function , I could update all the way to the current version 4+. This took a lot of download, install, reboot, rerun, download install, reboot, ... cycles.

Of course, I had to update in order for the program to recognize a Razr. I knew the function was there (because I had updated years ago), but had trouble finding the function.

I finally found that the live update was activated by the program's user interface, which is designed like your phone. If it doesn't recognize your phone, it will default to a standard form. Just press the Menu button on the "phone" and you can trigger the live update.

By the way, the easiest and by far the cheapest way to put screen images and ringtones on your phone is with the Motorola Phone Tools software. Of course, you can use the connection in the other direction, to download pictures you take with the camera to your computer.

Amazon.com has the program, too -- and the price has dramatically fallen. I don't know how long the price will be good, but I bought a copy — with both miniUSB and the old-style Motorola cables — for only $11.49. Amazon was the vendor, too, not one of the companies selling through Amazon.

 

Link to this page — just add this code to your web page!

<a href="http://www.terryscomputertips.com/computers/cell-phone-upgrade-time.php">Phone Upgrade Time</a>

Copyright © 2006-2007 Terry A. Stockdale. All rights reserved.


 
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