Cell phone coverage, service and general comments

Whizzer

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I lost my cell phone while plowing a farmers field and went to buy a new one but the carrier won't let me keep the plan I had so must get another phone. to NJ, Rochester, NY area, etc., plus around the east coast and mid-west periodically and would like to be able to use it for phoning, texting, email and search on Google.
I am not computer literate and lack understanding of technical terminology. Looking for suggestions on carriers (Verizon, Sprint, AT&T, Virgin, T-Mobile, etc.) coverage and overall satisfaction. Any comments regarding a phone recommendation , etc., will be appreciated.
 
Verizon for me, good coverage.
 
Verizon for me. I've went through a couple other carriers over the years and determined that Verizon worked the best for us.

There is a place out there called www.opensignal.com that displays the coverage maps of the major carriers. Verizon appears to have the widest coverage but another carrier may be better for where you reside.
 
Verizon here for my personal phone. My work switched our Blackberries from Verizon to Sprint, and now are trying to change back. Coverage sucks.
 
I have Straight Talk from Wal-Mart. It works great and is only $45 a month. They have a great choice in phones and I never have trouble with coverage.
 
Really appreciate all the comments and suggestions. The open signal.com website was very helpful. I will keep looking for additional opinions and thanks to those who already offered and may have more to offer. So far, I've scratched AT&T, Virgin and Sprint as they do not cover areas I frequently travel. Still looking at Verizon, T-Mobile and never having heard of Straight Talk, will give them a look-see. As far as a phone, my neighbor suggested the Samsung Galaxy 4 for its o/s over an iphone. Again, soliciting comments on cell phone service and cell phones in general and thanks to all who have given their time and suggestions..
 
Really appreciate all the comments and suggestions. The open signal.com website was very helpful. I will keep looking for additional opinions and thanks to those who already offered and may have more to offer. So far, I've scratched AT&T, Virgin and Sprint as they do not cover areas I frequently travel. Still looking at Verizon, T-Mobile and never having heard of Straight Talk, will give them a look-see. As far as a phone, my neighbor suggested the Samsung Galaxy 4 for its o/s over an iphone. Again, soliciting comments on cell phone service and cell phones in general and thanks to all who have given their time and suggestions..
As far as straight talk goes....I use it and use the ATT towers with a Samsung Galaxy express and get 4G LTE. Since you cant use Att you are limited to Spring or verizon towers...Which mean you don't get roaming towers, only Verizon owned towers and speeds only to 3G. If you want to keep life simple for yourself go to a Verizon store where you can get use of all towers.
 
If you're not technically inclined, an Android phone (like the Samsung phones suggested) may not be your best option. It takes a little tweaking to get it set up the way you'd like, and sometimes doesn't always work the way you might expect, unless you've used it before. Of course, if you have a friend who knows Android and will help you set it up and figure it out, that might not be too big of an issue.

Of those phones, the ones I'd look at are the HTC One, Samsung Galaxy Note 3, or Google Nexus 5. If you prefer the biggest screen you can get, the Galaxy Note 3 is the current big screen champ. It has a correspondingly gigantic battery and will probably last several days, or even a week between charges. You can also use the included pen to make little handwritten notes, instead of the onscreen keyboard. The Nexus 5 is the least expensive in terms of its full price, and is probably one of the best phones out there, because it's a pure Android experience without all of the clutter that most other Android phones have. Android is, of course, great at integrating with Google services, like search, Gmail, and maps, so if you're heavily into the Google world, Android is a decent companion.

I'd strongly recommend looking into an iPhone and seeing if it will do all that you want it to do. From what you've said, calls, texts, emails, and Google search, it will do that job perfectly. The iPhone has a much more streamlined design that doesn't have as many features or options, but that also means there aren't as many ways to get lost. I also think iPhone's voice control is a lot better--you can have an easier time dialing people or sending messages via voice with an iPhone than with an Android. If you're into customizing your phone's operating system and having all sorts of little widgets all over your screen, then an iPhone is not the one for you. If, like me, you just want it to do what it does, and do it very well, then the iPhone's a great option. Apple has put a lot of time and thought into making the iPhone the way it is, and from a user's standpoint, a developer's standpoint, and an accessory maker's standpoint, it's my choice.

I've used both, have several different phones, and would be happy to make some videos of doing stuff on each if you'd like to see specific comparisons.

T-mobile is my carrier of choice. Their coverage isn't the best, but their plans are the nicest out of the big four (AT&T and Verizon all charge way too much for what they deliver) and they are growing quickly as a result. You can get unlimited minutes and messages for $50, and you still get a bit of data, plenty enough for email and web browsing. Unlimited data for $20 more. You can even use your phone as an internet connection for no extra charge.

The big thing with T-mobile is either you buy the phone full price and bring it yourself, or you buy it from them and pay it off in installments. If you buy it through T-mobile, typically they set it up in a 2 year payment plan for ~$20 a month, but after that 2 years, the price of your phone service actually goes down unlike the others who want to keep charging you the same price even though you've already more than paid off your phone.

My previous carrier was AT&T, I was grandfathered into their old unlimited data plan (which they no longer offer), and I got tired of them treating me like I was a criminal or a bad person for using my phone too much. I got rid of them a little over half a year ago and have not once regretted it.
 
As far as a phone, my neighbor suggested the Samsung Galaxy 4 for its o/s over an iphone. Again, soliciting comments on cell phone service and cell phones in general and thanks to all who have given their time and suggestions..
Our family of four just upgraded our phones last week. My son has always liked the iPhone so he got their latest iPhone 5s. My wife, daughter and I each got the Samsung Galaxy S4. I prefer the Android operating system of the Galaxy S4 over that of the iPhone because of the flexibility.
 
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My wife say's that I score a zero on the nerdocityometer, partly because I just have a Samsung flip top that makes perfectly good phone calls.
 
My wife say's that I score a zero on the nerdocityometer, partly because I just have a Samsung flip top that makes perfectly good phone calls.
If I remember right, I think this was the phone you were using @ Eldora last July. I was somewhat surprised that you opted for the strap accessory.

Nokia_Mobira_Cityman_3.jpg

She's right. You need to at least get with the 90's.
 
If I remember right, I think this was the phone you were using @ Eldora last July. I was somewhat surprised that you opted for the strap accessory.

Nokia_Mobira_Cityman_3.jpg

She's right. You need to at least get with the 90's.
If that one still worked I would still be using it but it died on me a few years ago. :D
 
I miss the days when a phone was just a phone, and it wasn't even wireless, it used a little dangly wire that had to always be connected to the wall. At least you knew that part would always work as long as the wire was good.

As someone who works on automotive technology, I witness firsthand nowadays, people sure are asking a lot of their phones...connect up to the radio with Bluetooth, play music, make phone calls, do voice commands, such and such app, etc. and every step of the way, something (and often everything) goes wrong

(Not to start any flame wars, but in my experience, it's usually Android or some specific Android phone that goes wrong...just sayin)
 
fury, I still have one of those phone with the little dangly wire that connects to the wall. I know that if I pick it up, dial 911, they know who and where I am if I have difficulty talking. It really came in handy when my husband was having major difficulties and I was panicking.

Just call me old-fashioned. :)
 
I still have a land line for my primary phone. I have a TracFone for traveling; it is usually turned off. I felt like an idiot when I took my TracFone back to Radio Shack because I thought it was broken; I discovered I had to hold the power button down for a few seconds. I can build my own PCs but I can't operate a cell phone.
 
Special thank you to all who offered suggestions, personal experiences and thoughts on my quandary over replacing the lost cdll phone.I simply could not justify spending from $40 to $100 per month for cell phone service and then adding the additional cost of $300.00 to $550 for the device. I can buy a flip phone for $19.95 and call the same places I can with a more expensive phone but without the bells and whistles.
I really appreciate the responses and understand each has their own priorities and uses of a cell phone. Mine, upon reflection, are very narrow thus will stick with a flip phone. Now, if I can only remember to take it with me, and then remember to turn it on ……………………………..;)
 
I use a big galaxy note 2 or 3 (the biggest screen) with Verizon. It is pricey but I love it.

My first smartphone was a Microsoft phone. The device was thick, over 3/4 of an inch, maybe an inch. The screen was small. I did like having word and excel on a phone, but otherwise I am happy with Android.

My wife has a 4s she loves it, but I am spoiled by the speed of the 4G, and the screen size of my Galaxy.
 
Special thank you to all who offered suggestions, personal experiences and thoughts on my quandary over replacing the lost cdll phone.I simply could not justify spending from $40 to $100 per month for cell phone service and then adding the additional cost of $300.00 to $550 for the device. I can buy a flip phone for $19.95 and call the same places I can with a more expensive phone but without the bells and whistles.
I really appreciate the responses and understand each has their own priorities and uses of a cell phone. Mine, upon reflection, are very narrow thus will stick with a flip phone. Now, if I can only remember to take it with me, and then remember to turn it on ……………………………..;)

If I was retired I would get a simple talk only type of phone, and complement it with a Microsoft tablet. That would have most all of the office capabilities to run off of wifi in a compact easily held device.
 
fury, I still have one of those phone with the little dangly wire that connects to the wall. I know that if I pick it up, dial 911, they know who and where I am if I have difficulty talking. It really came in handy when my husband was having major difficulties and I was panicking.

Just call me old-fashioned. :)
I also still have a dangly wire phone for the same reasons, security.
 
I love my Straight Talk Service. I have a Samsung Galaxy 3 phone that I love. I hope you end up liking yours, as much as I do.

I love Straight Talk.. Coverage is still great. Glad I finally made the change. No regrets.
I did start out with a simple phone, Straight Talk Huawei H881C Ascend Plus Android.
 
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