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Cingular GSM Network

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Pondscum said:
Ok, I'll be the goofball that has to ask........... what is GSM? How does it compare to Tri-Band?

Global System for Mobile Communication (GSM)

I think tri-band is GSM.
 
Pondscum said:
Ok, I'll be the goofball that has to ask........... what is GSM? How does it compare to Tri-Band?

Well "Tri-Band" when in reference to GSM means it will cover 3 of the 4 GSM Bands. There are currently 4 GSM bands, 850/900/1800/1900 Mhz... Typically "Tri-Band" covers 900/1800/1900... Cingular and AT&T use the new 850 band because they are migrating to GSM from TDMA and are using GSM technology in the regular cell phone spectrum (850)... T-Mobile uses the 1900 band, so when you buy a T-Mobile phone you will get a Tri-Band phone and it will not have 850, so you can't even roam onto Cingular or AT&T's systems.... Which will greatly reduce your domestic GSM coverage.

The moral of the story is if you can get a Quad-Band GSM phone for the price you like, grab it... It will give you the most comprehensive GSM coverage available. The only Quad-Band phone that Cingular offers (to my knowledge) is the Motorola V400, AT&T offers the Quad-Band Motorola V600...

Hope this helps... I did a lot of research into this before getting my phone...
 
Quad band phones are also necessary if you are going abroad to places like Europe. You can buy prepaid sim cards and you then have cheap usage with your existing phone.
 
I was on the AT&T 1200 minute plan for $119 a month.

I switched to Verizon wireless, and also signed up for their DSL and unlimited home long distance plan. I couldn't be happier.

First, I get 800 peak time minutes for $59.95 a month. I don't have to use any of them when I call another Verizon phone in area because I also have 1,000 mobile to moblile minutes. Finally, I have unlimited night and weekend use. At my current rates of peak use, I will probably opt to change down to the basic plan of $39.95 a month, which will probably have more peak minutes than I need.

A saving of almost $80 a month, and better customer service, better coverage, and a free phone after two years. And those CDMA towers are everywhere.

GSM is the wave of the future, and I have to agree with kevdog (a first, for me) that you want the GSM phone for Europe, and the prepaid sim cards. GSM is spreading here, but a Verizon engineer told me that it will be five years before the US has really good coverage here for GSM.

So, in December '05 I'll get a new LG phone free from Verizon, and down the road a GSM phone when Verizon has substantial coverage.

When I sent AT&T their last check, I wrote "goodbye from" next to my name on the check. :D
 
Timebuilder said:
GSM is the wave of the future, and I have to agree with kevdog (a first, for me) that you want the GSM phone for Europe, and the prepaid sim cards. GSM is spreading here, but a Verizon engineer told me that it will be five years before the US has really good coverage here for GSM.
[/B]

Timebuilder, I love you! :D

Cingular has pretty good GSM coverage already in place. Basically, anywhere there are larger amounts of people, they have coverage. Some places like Vermont and Montana do not. Any city in the country has coverage.

GSM towers used to cost around a million bucks to install but are now closer to 300K. If verizon is really going to need another 5 years to become GSM compliant...

TB, it's nice to hear that you like something those commie/socialist/freesex loving/Eurotrash have been enjoying for more than 6 years. They have it even better, they only pay if they make the call, receiving is free. And they have live video phones that are pretty cool. I knew we would agree on something sometime down the road. Hell (no pun intended), I want to fly with you now! :D
 

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