Everyone else is commenting on the new
iPhone before it's release, so
why can’t I? My two cents is that I won’t be
camping out at the Apple Store for an iPhone this
evening. Yes, the price seems high, but in reality
its not. If you price other smartphones, it becomes
obvious that without the common provider subsidy,
smarpthpones are expensive. An
unlocked Palm Treo 680 goes for
$399 retail. The
Nokia N95, will setup you back
a whopping
$749. Spending $499 or $599
seems average all of a sudden. I purchased an
unlocked, ‘used’ and
discontinued
Palm Tero 650 in January via
eBay and it cost me around $160. Sure, I could have
purchased a new Palm Treo 680 for $199, but that
would have stuck me with a commitment to a
different provider.
Ay, there's the rub, I don’t want to switch
providers. I’m quite happy with
T-Mobile. I spent hell on earth
for many years with
Sprint. A small example, no
matter how many times I corrected them, they
couldn’t get the spelling of my last name correct.
More than once I had half a mind to skip paying. If
they complain, I would have said, “Sorry but nobody
by that name resides at this address.” Strike one
against Sprint.
Most of my time with Sprint was spent before the
ability to keep one’s cell phone number while
switching networks, so I just learned to limit my
contact with their ‘customer service’
representatives as much as I could. When I moved
back to Chicago from the San Francisco Bay Area I
had a chance to start anew and took it - I also
learned how horrible Sprint’s coverage area was
outside of a metropolitan area while driving the
moving van. Strike Two!
I did a little research and chose T-Mobile. The
biggest reason for T-Mobile at the time was the
fact that its uses
GSM, which is the worldwide
standard, for its phone network. For me, the logic
played out like this: GSM is a more widely adapted
technology and given the fact that I’ll be
traveling abroad more – my
wife-to-be is Irish, her and
her family emigrated to the States when she was 5
- and given the horribly out-dated experience I had
using a long distance phone card the first time I
meet her family – thanks to Sprint, strike three,
your out – it seemed the right thing to do. In
fact, it has been the right thing, while I don’t
make a lot of calls, let alone calls while abroad,
I’ve found that text messaging, both back to the
States and with ‘the locals’ is the quick, easy and
relatively cheap way to communicate, keeping
everyone on the same page when needed.
Yeah, I know
AT&T is GSM, but that’s only
one factor. Another, as you can guess by the
knocking on Sprint, is service, both the network
and the customer kind. I have very little patience
for what passes as customer service these days; I
do not suffer fools gladly - I can admit that I’d
make a poor customer service representative myself,
but that’s a different set of issues. I’m happy
with T-Mobile. I don’t tend to communicate directly
with them much, but when I do I can’t complain. In
two plus years with them, I’ve only had one issue
with a rep offering me bad advice, but it was
quickly corrected when I brought the problem up
with another rep. I can’t say I’m itching to move
to a different provided for ‘better’ customer service.
While in theory AT&T’s voice service is the same
network technology, thus the same coverage, I’m a
little concerned by
David Pogue's note that “in a
Consumer Reports study, AT&T’s signal ranked either
last or second to last in 19 out of 20 major
cities” and that his own tests with the iPhone in
five different states “bear this out.” Not a good
sign. A worst sign is the fact that the first
version of the iPhone is using the
EDGE network for data, instead
of and as many others wish to see,
HSPA or the
like. I think Pouge speaks for
many gadget—heads when he says this “drawback may
be deal-killers for some people.”
Indeed, my Treo 650 and the Motorola v600 I
originally had with T-Mobile use
GPRS for data, which is slower
than EDGE, but given the grandfathered in t-zones
data plan I have, $4.99 for unlimited data, means I
won’t be jumping ship for something slightly
faster. Moreover, GPRS is just fine for the
Blazer web browser accessing
WAP enabled websites or using
Chatter to sync
IMAP for mostly text based
email. I’m sure trying to access ‘rich media’ with
Mail or Safari on the iPhone with a stopgap data
network would indeed be “excruciatingly slow. You
almost ache for a dial-up modem.”
In other words, I like my service provider; I like
my service plan and I'm happy with the voice/data
network and customer service I receive. While I’m
not using a T-Mobile phone, having dumped the
Motorola v600 for said Treo 650, I’m content with
the phone itself, its large software library and
the
gigabytes of advice floating
around on
the ‘net. Its not just about ‘the phone’ its
about the phone, the network
and the
customer service.
Now, if I got my hands on an unlocked iPhone…