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  1. #16
    Jeremy
    Guest

    Re: TDMA Service in NJ/NYC

    Alcoholic wrote:
    > We do not sell Panasonic phones ;did ATT? It could be with network upgrades
    > it has caused some sort of issue with TDMA service.


    Yes, I got the phones through ATTWS (These were the featured TDMA phones
    after ATTWS stopped pushing the Ericsson T18/T19 flip phones. These
    Panasonic phones all had "AWS" part numbers--they were not designed for
    another network. They always worked fine whenever I travelled north
    into New Jersey. And I am on an ATTWS Digital Plan--$29.95 per line per
    month, free incoming text messages, 650 anytime minutes, 7 PM N/W, Free
    long distance, free Mobile-to-Mobile. I'd migrate to GSM if Cingular
    would give me the same deal, but they will not.

    This business of the phone shutting off is really a problem--it is like
    having no phone at all. Who has the time to keep turning the phone back
    on several times an hour?



    See More: Service in NJ/NYC




  2. #17
    Alcoholic
    Guest

    Re: TDMA Service in NJ/NYC

    I really think you would be better of going with Verizon assuming Cingular
    does not have you in a contract. NJ and NYC is so hit and miss right now
    coverage wise. Cingular is not doing anything to power your phones off
    however so again I do agree wit Mr Navas that you do have a phone issue or
    battery failure. The programming might help but you will have to consult
    Panasonic for general programming how to then get Cingular to give you the
    Home Soc and other info for TDMA.
    "Jeremy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:2y3Pe.12583$3%1.6891@trndny08...
    > Alcoholic wrote:
    >> We do not sell Panasonic phones ;did ATT? It could be with network
    >> upgrades it has caused some sort of issue with TDMA service.

    >
    > Yes, I got the phones through ATTWS (These were the featured TDMA phones
    > after ATTWS stopped pushing the Ericsson T18/T19 flip phones. These
    > Panasonic phones all had "AWS" part numbers--they were not designed for
    > another network. They always worked fine whenever I travelled north into
    > New Jersey. And I am on an ATTWS Digital Plan--$29.95 per line per month,
    > free incoming text messages, 650 anytime minutes, 7 PM N/W, Free long
    > distance, free Mobile-to-Mobile. I'd migrate to GSM if Cingular would
    > give me the same deal, but they will not.
    >
    > This business of the phone shutting off is really a problem--it is like
    > having no phone at all. Who has the time to keep turning the phone back
    > on several times an hour?






  3. #18
    Isaiah Beard
    Guest

    Re: TDMA Service in NJ/NYC

    Jeremy wrote:

    >
    > We have THREE lines, all with Panasonic Versio phones, and it happens on
    > all 3 lines. I assume that these phones are set up to conserve battery
    > power by shutting down in non-digital areas.


    The Version EB-TX320? It does dual band TDMA and AMPS, so unless
    there's a setting that excludes AMPS, it should jus switch to analog.

    The possibility exists that TDMA may be shut off in the northern NJ/NY
    market, which was AT&T on 1900, and your phones do not know that there
    may be TDMA service to look for on Cingular. Cingular was/is A-side
    cellular in parts of NJ north of Princeton.

    > Why would the phone not be able to find a signal in Central NJ, which
    > has Cingular towers sales offices all over the place? Why does it go
    > through that long search period, before finally coming up with "Extended
    > Area" and 5 bars of signal strength after about 2 minutes?


    Yup, looks like the AT&T network has TDMA off, and now you're "roaming"
    on Cingular Orange.

    > Did Cingular do away with the Blue network in Central NJ?


    Definitely not for GSM, but probably for TDMA. This is just
    speculation, but maybe they intend to use the Blue network to deploy
    UMTS and needed room.

    > I will NEVER migrate to any Cingular plan. If my service continues to
    > deteriorate I'll find another carrier. My roaming consists of
    > travelling within a 75-mile radius of Philadelphia--there must be decent
    > service available to accomodate my modest requirements.


    FWIW, Verizon definitely blows Cingular out of the water in terms of
    coverage in the Philly and surrounding area. This is from personal
    experience, as I just traveled along a corridor from Baltimore, to
    Philly, to New York, and previously did the same stint with Cingular.




    --
    E-mail fudged to thwart spammers.
    Transpose the c's and a's in my e-mail address to reply.



  4. #19
    Jeremy
    Guest

    Re: TDMA Service in NJ/NYC

    Isaiah Beard wrote:
    > Jeremy wrote:
    >
    >>
    >> We have THREE lines, all with Panasonic Versio phones, and it happens
    >> on all 3 lines. I assume that these phones are set up to conserve
    >> battery power by shutting down in non-digital areas.

    >
    >
    > The Version EB-TX320? It does dual band TDMA and AMPS, so unless
    > there's a setting that excludes AMPS, it should jus switch to analog.
    >
    > The possibility exists that TDMA may be shut off in the northern NJ/NY
    > market, which was AT&T on 1900, and your phones do not know that there
    > may be TDMA service to look for on Cingular. Cingular was/is A-side
    > cellular in parts of NJ north of Princeton.
    >
    >> Why would the phone not be able to find a signal in Central NJ, which
    >> has Cingular towers sales offices all over the place? Why does it go
    >> through that long search period, before finally coming up with
    >> "Extended Area" and 5 bars of signal strength after about 2 minutes?

    >
    >
    > Yup, looks like the AT&T network has TDMA off, and now you're "roaming"
    > on Cingular Orange.
    >
    >> Did Cingular do away with the Blue network in Central NJ?

    >
    >
    > Definitely not for GSM, but probably for TDMA. This is just
    > speculation, but maybe they intend to use the Blue network to deploy
    > UMTS and needed room.
    >
    >> I will NEVER migrate to any Cingular plan. If my service continues to
    >> deteriorate I'll find another carrier. My roaming consists of
    >> travelling within a 75-mile radius of Philadelphia--there must be
    >> decent service available to accomodate my modest requirements.

    >
    >
    > FWIW, Verizon definitely blows Cingular out of the water in terms of
    > coverage in the Philly and surrounding area. This is from personal
    > experience, as I just traveled along a corridor from Baltimore, to
    > Philly, to New York, and previously did the same stint with Cingular.
    >
    >
    >
    >



    I phoned Cingular last night and explained the problem to some airhead
    that fancied herself a "Customer Service Rep." She kept me on hold for
    15 minutes while she relayed my problem to Tech Support, then she came
    back and said that they were going to issue a coverage outage report, or
    some such nonsense. They would have a tech check to see if the towers
    were operating properly along Rt. 1 . . .

    I explained again that this was a phone programming issue--that Cingular
    towere were all over the place in that part of the state, and that they
    would have received NUMEROUS complaints if their towers were
    malfunctioning. I calmly repeated that as soon as I returned to the
    Philly area and the display changed from "Extended Area" back to
    "Cingular," everything worked just fine.

    "Oh," she said . . .

    Can you sense my frustration at knowing that "I," who know little about
    the technical end of cellular service, know MORE than the "Customer
    Service Rep" that works for Cingular?



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