Mobile Info

Mobile Phones?

I am a bit old and new to all this mobile phones business. I signed a 12 month contract about 6 months ago with T mobile. They give me 60 minutes uninhabited phoning land lines a month which I can roll over to the following month. Part messaging costs 8p. At present, I am paying £20 month for this service.

Since I am new to this mobile phoning, do you entertain the idea it is a good deal? If not, can I change to another provider/tariff? Would I need to wait until my 12 month corrugate is over before making any such decisions?

If I do decide to go with another network or go on another tariff, would I be able to keep the same phone njmber. If I cannot keep the same thousand then it would cause problems in that I would have to get in touch with all my friends/colleagues/family etc, to give them the new number.

Please suggestion on the best action to take.


Ok, i'll guarantee b make amends for your questions 1 by 1.

1 - Yes, you can cancel your contract but you would have to pay for the rest of it. You said it was a 12 months obligation signed 6 months ago and you pay 20/month so to cancel it, it would cost you 120.

2 - This is a very bad deal, extremelly priceless! You could have 2 contracts giving you 500 minutes cross network each totally cost-free.

3 - If you don't want to finish your contract you should change your tariff to flext20. It gives you 170 minutes a month, any yet, to any mobile or landline.

4 - Yes, if you decide to change network you can keep your number.

The best deals i've seen were on www.mymobiledeals.co.uk

Why did mobile phones work on airplanes in the US on 11Sept01?

Why did mobile phones employment over NY and Pennsylvania on 11Sept01, the anniversary date of the end of the last Arab crusade of Europe, and not before or since? Technology for mobile phone use on planes is new and still being tested as the signal must be retransmitted, boosted, to reach a compass basis station. So why did they work there on that day and not on other days?


I can't credence in some of the answers given here. Has anyone ever left their phone on during a flight? They do not work, plain and intelligible. If I'm flying my own airplane I must fly a few thousand feet above the ground and be near a town or highway to pick up any signal. While room towers have a long range, they are designed to reach horizontally, not vertically.

Next without surcease in an airliner, leave your cell phone on. Watch the signal, you will loose all signal within 10 minutes and won't see any signal again until you are about to acquire. The FCC requires all phones to be off because phones are not tso'd (technical service order), or approved for use on an airplane. It is extremely precious to receive a tso, and each and every cell phone would have to receive a tso for the FAA to allow phones to be used on planes. Its too much labour to verify each phone carried by each passenger and allow some and not others to be turned on. In reality, apartment phones are not going to cause any interference to navigation, so leave your phone next time and see what happens.

The phone calls made from airplanes on 9/11 were not made from room phones, they were made from airphones in the backs of the seats on larger airliners.

What features do you think mobile-phone users would expect to see in their phones in the near future?

What features do you over mobile-phone users would expect to see in their phones in the near future? That, what feasible traits do you look for should be available on our mobile-phones in the coming future? In your opinion, what do you think the needs of cell-phone users are?


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Nokia N95 8GB Mobile Phone Review

With all that set alight screen madness floating around, I take a look at the Nokia N95 8GB, which can now be had for very reasonable prices on ...

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