Category: Technology
Cell phones of mass destruction
What the hell is up with all of these reports of exploding cell phones???
Why MCI can kiss my ass, part II
Three more reasons:
- Looking at my final MCI bill I noticed that I was once again suicidally overcharged. There were two problems with it. The first was the same overcharging as below. As before they (eventually) fixed that up. The second was in the last five days of my service with them the rates on my calls (to a cell phone in Japan) went up from 14¢/minute to $7.81/minute! The customer support rep (and the customer support specialist who I was transferred to and her manager) were not willing to do anything about this. They gave me the steps to escalate, more later.
- I just noticed there is a $40 charge from MCI in April that doesn’t appear on any of my statements. The MCI rep I spoke with couldn’t see it either and told me that I had to call the finance department on Monday.
- They discontinued my service in my first month with them after accruing a whopping $35 in charges!!
On a happier note, I also got my first bill from AT&T. Unfortunately they also lied to me, fortunately I don’t mind. Instead of charging me 12¢/minute to a cell phone in Japan like they said, they charged me 10¢/minute… 10¢/minute!! This is to a cell phone located over five THOUSAND miles away!! This is only a penny more than it costs me to call my parents who live 40 miles away!
I haven’t seen anything, including those 10-10-xxx numbers and any pre-paid calling card that can beat that rate (again it’s to a cell phone, I realize that calling a land line in Japan can be cheap as hell).
Why MCI can kiss my ass
When I switched my long distance service to MCI a couple of months back, they told me that calls to both land lines and cell phones in Japan were the same rate of 14¢/minute. I asked this question very explicitly because I know that most companies charge a surcharge for calls to foreign cell phones. I asked the question about four times in various forms and each time they were very clear on their answer.
In any case I got my long distance bill this month and sure enough, as I was promised, all the calls to Japan (all of them calls to a mobile) were 14¢/minute. However, I was confused that after accruing international long distance fees of $120, I somehow had a bill that totalled $350! Now clearly there was no way that my local toll + domestic long distance + taxes/fees was enough to make up that much of a difference. Looking more closely at my bill, I noticed the vast majority of that difference was in an "international mobile surcharge". Speaking with customer service, it was explained to me that MCI charges you the standard country rate on the itemized part of the bill then (essentially) hides an additional per minute charge (19¢/minute in this case) in the international mobile surcharge – this makes my calls to Japanese cell phones 33¢/minute, not the 14¢/minute I was promised.
I’m not sure which I dislike more, getting charged up the ass without knowing it, or being totally and blatantly lied to.
Further, the ease at which they reversed the charges makes me believe that this is a common problem they deal with and they basically count on people not noticing these additional hidden charges.
I switched my service back to AT&T. They don’t have the best rates in every single category, but far and away, across the board they have the best deals. I have signed up for the "AT&T Anywhere International Plan" which supposedly will give me a phenomenal 12¢/minutes to both cell phones and land lines in Japan for calls that I make from my calling card ($19.95 minimum usage). These guys were very up front about the surcharges that they charged so hopefully this deal actually pans out – it certainly can’t be any worse than what I just switched from tho…
State of cell phone service in the US
In the past 6 months I have had, for varying reasons, three different cell phones with three different carriers. My thoughts on each along various criteria…
Coverage and Service – far and away the most important criteria. The damn thing’s gotta work to be useful
- Cingular – Utter and complete crap. It was always a mystery whether or not my phone would work when I pulled it out. Secondly, this GSM phone took the longest time to find a signal (5-20 seconds compared to <5 seconds for TDMA and CDMA). Finally, SMS was regularly dropped silently – was not a reliable medium.
- AT&T – AT&T’s TDMA coverage is excellent. However, from what I understand, the GSM coverage, while being a shade better than Cingular’s GSM, is still far from ideal – Basically, GSM in the United States is not ready for prime time. Additionally, they have done the best job of creating interesting content and services (american idol voting over SMS, 411 over SMS) – granted when I say interesting, it is not interesting to me, but they are definitely trying.
- Verizon – Far and away the best service coverage, both in terms of quality and area covered. I never have to worry whether or not my phone will work no matter where I am. However the lack of full international SMS is a little annoying.
Customer Service – at the end of the day the bar is usually set pretty low on this so any improvement is immediately noticeable
- Cingular – Like pulling teeth, customer service people consistently lacking in knowledge. Secondly, their billing system is flaky requiring even more calls into customer service. Finally, switching from a national plan to a local plan (or vice versa) resets your service contract (essentially adds a year to it).
- AT&T – Fantastic. Customer service people friendly and helpful and most importantly, knowledgeable. I have had a couple of non-trivial billing issues, all of which were solved quickly and efficiently. Additionally, price plans changes are made effective for that entire billing cycle, not prorated from that point forward.
- Verizon – Most of the time they are really friendly and want to be helpful, but tend to lack in higher end brain functions. I find that even simple tasks, even though they eventually always get solved, always take a *loooong* time.
Phones
- Cingular – Not bad actually, but does it really matter – with coverage this bad, you never can use the damn thing.
- AT&T – While there is a good selection of GSM phones, the TDMA and GAIT (combined TDMA and GSM) phones are lame.
- Verizon – Definitely improving, especially on the high-end.
In summary
- Cingular insults you across the board with bad marks in everything. I will give them credit that they are trying the hardest, offering features like nights that start at 7 and rollover minutes, but then again, they need to because they really need the most help.
- While AT&T‘s TDMA coverage is fantastic, it limits you to a selection of really lame phones and no GPRS/advanced data services. Since the GSM coverage is not acceptable, it means that it is not possible to get good coverage, data services and a cool phone all at the same time.
- Verizon‘s excellent coverage and a kick ass phone makes it the best carrier of the bunch.
Some thoughts on the other three national cell carriers in the U.S….
- T*Mobile/Voicestream – Tie up with wi-fi hot spots is possibly compelling, but still limits you to GSM coverage. Cingular and T*Mobile tend to share towers so the crappy Cingular service you get in the Bay Area is the same crappy service you will get on T*Mobile.
- Nextel – Don’t know much about them except that nobody that I know has service with them. I guess if you are into push-to-talk then it is the carrier of choice.
- Sprint – From what I hear, Sprint is far and away the best value for money in terms of the number of minutes you can get for the price, plus you can get unlimited data for just $10. However, it seems that Sprint’s coverage is pretty rotton. Has one of the better selections of phones though.
Why I hate Hotmail IV
My continuing tirade against Hotmail redux
Got this letter from a long lost friend:
Tried to send the link to the CIAC's website to everyone I know (I've gotten too much of this crap lately), and hotmail told me I have sent too many messages in the last 24 hours, so it won't let me send anymore (it cut off the last 20 or so people on my list)...
Why to we willingly let them do this to us?
Why I hate Hotmail III
My continuing tirade against hotmail…
While trying to troubleshoot a problem that someone was having with hotmail I came across this blurb in a message that Microsoft sent to all Hotmail users…
Keep your account size under the 2MB storage limit. Inboxes have a way of filling up fast, so please delete unwanted messages. If you go over the limit, the Hotmail Janitor will randomly delete messages until your account is back under the 2MB limit.
Unbelievable, they are advertising a service that will randomly delete your email… as a good thing… this is what I look for in an email provider.
Why I hate Hotmail II
- Corollary to point (1) mentioned earlier – the lack of a POP interface also means that you can’t use any other mail service to read your Hotmail mail (of course Microsoft provides the ability to use POP to suck mail from another mail service but once the mail is at your Hotmail account, it is stuck there)
- I have a couple of free mail accounts (Yahoo, Go, Excite, Hotmail) and Hotmail receives far and away the most porn and get rich quick spam
- In this day when hard disk space is so cheap, it is really pretty sad that Hotmail still provides a paltry 2MB… especially when all the other free mail providers are giving more
- The interface won’t let you in without javascript – this is just annoying, I should be able to disable it if I want
Why I hate Hotmail
- Hotmail accounts cannot be accessed via POP3 (it’s impossible to read Hotmail mail with any offline program except Outlook Express – you can’t even use Outlook)
- If you click on an external (non-MSN) link from an email message you get a new browser that has this evil frame that says that “You are visiting a site outside of Hotmail. To return to Hotmail, close this browser window.” Contrary to Microsoft’s beliefs, there is a world outside of MSN
- There is no way to get messages to be always saved in the “sent mail” folder. You must specify this manually for each message
- The junk/bulk mail filter is way too sensitive
- Messages in the “sent mail” folder are cleared every 30 days
- Many well publicized security breaches and a weak privacy policy
- Spam from Hotmail has a different icon than regular mail (again Microsoft utilizes a feature not available to the general public for it’s own benefit)
- Too much spam from Hotmail, when I get a letter from Yahoo, I always read it because it is invariably important. Letters from Hotmail are just more and more marketing propaganda and now go straight into the trash
I’m famous! Maybe…
So I was having lunch today in little plaza in front of 101 California in the financial district (mmmm, Specialty’s…) when I was approached by this woman from CNET who was doing interviews about people and their cell phone usage. I talked to her for a bit so keep an eye out on CNBC for me and my nerdphone. Actually, they probably won’t broadcast me, I don’t think I gave her what she wanted to hear (someone who was concerned about the 911 people not being to be able to automatically know my location).
