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  1. #1
    I am a current Cingular customer and am interested in getting a new
    phone/device that is internet enabled. What are my options? Blackberry?
    Palm? Will these devices connect to the internet as long as I am
    getting a Cingular signal (not roaming)? I would be using the device
    for phone and internet access in rural areas. I can currently connect
    to the internet in these areas with my LG phone, but I need more screen
    and keyboard. Thanks in advance.




    See More: Cingular - need internet device




  2. #2
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: Cingular - need internet device

    On 24 Aug 2006 07:05:58 -0700, [email protected] wrote in
    <[email protected]>:

    >I am a current Cingular customer and am interested in getting a new
    >phone/device that is internet enabled. What are my options? Blackberry?
    >Palm? Will these devices connect to the internet as long as I am
    >getting a Cingular signal (not roaming)? I would be using the device
    >for phone and internet access in rural areas. I can currently connect
    >to the internet in these areas with my LG phone, but I need more screen
    >and keyboard. Thanks in advance.


    http://cingular.com shows the currently available devices.

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



  3. #3
    Jeffrey Kaplan
    Guest

    Re: Cingular - need internet device

    It is alleged that [email protected] claimed:

    > I am a current Cingular customer and am interested in getting a new
    > phone/device that is internet enabled. What are my options? Blackberry?
    > Palm? Will these devices connect to the internet as long as I am
    > getting a Cingular signal (not roaming)? I would be using the device


    I love my Treo. I've never used a Blackberry, but I'm given to
    understand that as far as online stuff goes, if you want more than
    email, don't bother.

    My Treo can do data wherever I have a data capable signal, I don't
    think roaming has anything to do with it.

    > for phone and internet access in rural areas. I can currently connect
    > to the internet in these areas with my LG phone, but I need more screen
    > and keyboard. Thanks in advance.


    If your current phone can get a GPRS or EDGE signal, then so will the
    Treo (or Blackberry). Being in a rural area does not effect this,
    tower placement does.

    --
    Jeffrey Kaplan www.gordol.org
    The from userid is killfiled Send personal mail to gordol

    DISCLAIMER: For off-road use only.



  4. #4

    Re: Cingular - need internet device

    Have a look at the Cingular 8125, it's the best phone/pda they offer.

    [email protected] wrote:
    > I am a current Cingular customer and am interested in getting a new
    > phone/device that is internet enabled. What are my options? Blackberry?
    > Palm? Will these devices connect to the internet as long as I am
    > getting a Cingular signal (not roaming)? I would be using the device
    > for phone and internet access in rural areas. I can currently connect
    > to the internet in these areas with my LG phone, but I need more screen
    > and keyboard. Thanks in advance.





  5. #5

    Re: Cingular - need internet device

    Hi there from Adam in NYC.

    Just got a intersting combo for my uses. I had a Treo 650 but it turned
    out to be a hardware lemon. I went to the Cingular site and got me a
    Motorola L2 and received shipment of a Nokia 770. You might want to
    see the website:

    http://www.nokiausa.com/770?kwc=KNC-...+%22&HBX_OU=50

    The L2 is Bluetooth capable and it is a fine phone. The Nokia 770 is a
    fine WiFi and Bluetooth tablet that goes for cheap (369 for Nokia, got
    one on eBay for $300). Together you can surf and roam as you please.

    Adam

    [email protected] wrote:
    > Have a look at the Cingular 8125, it's the best phone/pda they offer.
    >
    > [email protected] wrote:
    > > I am a current Cingular customer and am interested in getting a new
    > > phone/device that is internet enabled. What are my options? Blackberry?
    > > Palm? Will these devices connect to the internet as long as I am
    > > getting a Cingular signal (not roaming)? I would be using the device
    > > for phone and internet access in rural areas. I can currently connect
    > > to the internet in these areas with my LG phone, but I need more screen
    > > and keyboard. Thanks in advance.





  6. #6
    Thurman
    Guest

    Re: Cingular - need internet device


    <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > Hi there from Adam in NYC.
    >
    > The Nokia 770 is a
    > fine WiFi and Bluetooth tablet that goes for cheap (369 for Nokia, got
    > one on eBay for $300). Together you can surf and roam as you please.


    I used the 770 for a half hour. It may be the worst device Nokia ever
    designed. I can't imagine engineers talking a VP into producing that.

    To start with it makes a brick look portable. They tried to cram a PC into a
    paper back sized block, but cut costs, probably from cost over-runs, by
    using a Linux OS. The average cellular user is overwhelmed by a Razr, much
    less Unix.

    Wi-Fi may be many, but it isn't ubiquitous like cellular. You could grow old
    trying to surf via tethering. A large aircraft company has chosen Wi-Fi as
    their first 'mobility platform'. I can imagine the engineers, once connected
    into Starbucks, will stay there to utilize the expense account and waste
    hours. The rest of us have productivity to pursue.

    Claims of displaying an entire web page is true, but it's only readable by a
    fire ant. You can zoom, which decreases readability like opening too many
    web pages at once. I'd like to say it's a good first cut by engineering, but
    I don't think 2nd cut will happen.

    I really wanted that to be a portable alternative to tablet PCs or steroid
    PDAs, but Nokia blew it. The reason you got it so cheap is it's a fire sale,
    in my opinion. New notebooks are down to $400. Better displays for cell
    phones are coming. The cellular networks continue to upgrade. Better
    alternatives will show up by end of year.





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