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  1. #1

    You heard it here first:

    Currently you sign up for the AT&T Unity plan
    and you lose your Cingular Rollover Minutes and capability.

    That is going to change soon, so Roll-Over will remain. (May 1 ?).



    See More: Change to Unity Plan




  2. #2
    SMS
    Guest

    Re: Change to Unity Plan

    [email protected] wrote:
    > You heard it here first:
    >
    > Currently you sign up for the AT&T Unity plan
    > and you lose your Cingular Rollover Minutes and capability.
    >
    > That is going to change soon, so Roll-Over will remain. (May 1 ?).


    Hmm, maybe AT&T is actually going to try to sell the Unity plan, rather
    than just using it in advertisements!



  3. #3

    Re: Change to Unity Plan

    On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 02:58:43 -0700, SMS <[email protected]>
    wrote:

    >[email protected] wrote:
    >> You heard it here first:
    >>
    >> Currently you sign up for the AT&T Unity plan
    >> and you lose your Cingular Rollover Minutes and capability.
    >>
    >> That is going to change soon, so Roll-Over will remain. (May 1 ?).

    >
    >Hmm, maybe AT&T is actually going to try to sell the Unity plan, rather
    >than just using it in advertisements!


    It does allow them to quote 100 Million for the total of Cingular and
    ATT landline customers in their Advertisements.

    For many small businesses it could be a good deal. For residential
    customers like myself, it makes zero sense to pay for $40/month
    so I could get a ATT landline long distance to save maybe 100 Minutes
    on my Cingular plan that has over a 1000 rollover minutes on it. I
    haven't made a long distance call from my landline in 3 years.



  4. #4
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: Change to Unity Plan

    On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 11:32:49 -0700, SMS <[email protected]>
    wrote in <[email protected]>:

    >[email protected] wrote:
    >
    >> It does allow them to quote 100 Million for the total of Cingular and
    >> ATT landline customers in their Advertisements.
    >>
    >> For many small businesses it could be a good deal.

    >
    >I doubt it. Small businesses are especially vigilant at keeping costs
    >under control, and there are far less expensive alternatives to long
    >distance than the Unity plan.


    Actually just the opposite -- small businesses tend to lack the
    expertise of big businesses, and are far more likely to have less than
    optimal communications as a result.

    >> For residential
    >> customers like myself, it makes zero sense to pay for $40/month
    >> so I could get a ATT landline long distance to save maybe 100 Minutes
    >> on my Cingular plan that has over a 1000 rollover minutes on it. I
    >> haven't made a long distance call from my landline in 3 years.

    >
    >I think that many, if not most, wireless users are in the same
    >situation. Between included unlimited nights & weekends, and included
    >unlimited mobile to mobile, the need to pay for long distance calls from
    >a land line is minimal. For those times that you want to save peak
    >minutes, there are plenty of low cost long distance plans, such as
    >OneSuite or TalkLoop. No wonder companies like Vonage can't make it.


    Vonage is easily ahead of fringe players like those, but has a very big
    problem in the legal area.

    --
    Best regards, FAQ FOR CINGULAR WIRELESS:
    John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cingular_Wireless_FAQ>



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