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"Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... snipped If only Sanyo made a phone for Verizon, the runner-up in my quest for better and/or new service..... Talk about dumb, though: When I first got a cell phone, I signed a 1-year, 29.95 per month contract with Sprint. At the end of the contract, I did nothing, they said nothing, and I just kept paying the bills for 2 more years. I called the guy at the Sprint store this morning and mentioned the Sanyo phone. He said that in order to get that phone, I'd have to upgrade to 39.95 per month. I asked how a monetary issue is connected to the particular phone, and he sort of mumbled something about the purchase deal for the phone. He's checking with his supervisor blah blah blah. The minimum plans now are $35/mo. plus taxes and surcharges. If you take the full $150 credit off a new phone, you will be required to commit to a new 2 year agreement. Bob |
"Bob Smith" wrote in message ink.net... "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... snipped If only Sanyo made a phone for Verizon, the runner-up in my quest for better and/or new service..... Talk about dumb, though: When I first got a cell phone, I signed a 1-year, 29.95 per month contract with Sprint. At the end of the contract, I did nothing, they said nothing, and I just kept paying the bills for 2 more years. I called the guy at the Sprint store this morning and mentioned the Sanyo phone. He said that in order to get that phone, I'd have to upgrade to 39.95 per month. I asked how a monetary issue is connected to the particular phone, and he sort of mumbled something about the purchase deal for the phone. He's checking with his supervisor blah blah blah. The minimum plans now are $35/mo. plus taxes and surcharges. If you take the full $150 credit off a new phone, you will be required to commit to a new 2 year agreement. Bob By the way, I was with a friend at a Verizon outlet a couple of months back. He wanted a phone ONLY for emergencies, and began to walk away from the counter when the guy gave him prices for plans with 200-400 minutes. The salesman said "Hang on a sec....", checked with someone else in the store, and revealed that there's a 19.95 deal with either no minutes, or very few - I don't recall. He said they don't publicize it much. Just something to know.... |
I agree with you that Sanyo A/V equipment is junk. However, their
cell phones are uncharacteristically excellent. Absolutely! Conversely, I have a Samsung refrigerator in my kitchen and a Samsung 19 inch LCD display on my computer, and they are excellent products that I have highly praised and recommended to other people. However Samsung's cell phones, for lack of a better term, are total ****. Every Samsung cell phone I've tried from 1999 all the way to the present are cheaply constructed, have horrible audio quality, and couldn't hold calls even when I was outside and in plain view of a Sprint cell tower. I bought a Sanyo 5300 before coming to college just so that I wouldn't have to fight with the Samsung I had before that, since it would be my only phone. I activated it and have had only a few rare problems with it. A year after I got my 5300, my sister started to whine DAILY to me that "Sprint sucks so bad, I get cut off a minute into each and every call." She really wasn't lying. This was during the last 3 months or our 2-year contract, and both my parents' and sister's Samsungs were deteriorating fast, even after PRL/firmware updates. I was constantly telling her that it was the phone, not the service, but she wanted to switch to Verizon badly. I told her to give Sprint a chance, specifically with Sanyo 4920s. She hasn't mentioned one dropped call since. Talk about a total 180, huh? The retention deal wasn't too bad, either. Why would Sprint represent their service so poorly with Samsung phones instead of pushing Sanyo? In retail, repeat sales always takes precedence over a higher phone-profit-margin. It seems like a no-brainer. Oh, and the Samsungs were all A400s. -- Phil, Squid-in-Training |
Phil, Squid-in-Training wrote:
Why would Sprint represent their service so poorly with Samsung phones instead of pushing Sanyo? In retail, repeat sales always takes precedence over a higher phone-profit-margin. It seems like a no-brainer. Samsungs are OK. I like my A660. However, they could be better at holding signals - my wife's (discontinued) Hitachi P300 seems to generally be better than mine is. For RF, it probably doesn't come close to the Sanyo phones. -- JustThe.net Internet & New Media Services, http://JustThe.net/ Steven J. Sobol, Geek In Charge / 888.480.4NET (4638) / PGP Key available from your friendly local key server (0xE3AE35ED) Apple Valley, California Nothing scares me anymore. I have three kids. |
"Phil, Squid-in-Training" wrote in message
... Why would Sprint represent their service so poorly with Samsung phones instead of pushing Sanyo? In retail, repeat sales always takes precedence over a higher phone-profit-margin. It seems like a no-brainer. Oh, and the Samsungs were all A400s. I'm not familiar with the Samsung A400, but our family has used Samsung A620 (VGA1000) phones for the past year, and we like them quite well. Before that we used the Samsung 8500, also a nice phone. -- John Richards |
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