Continuing to prepare for when my contract expires in October.
As I've stated before, I use this phone as my professional tether. I use a fair amount of Wifi for data / email so my GB / month hover around 1.6GB.
Are we talking usage as a WiFi hotspot here for
other devices? After all this time, I'm
still having difficulty understanding how corporate email can eat up 1-1.6GB of mobile wireless data a
month, even and especially using available WiFi at home and work whenever possible. I've got a fully untamed inbox that hasn't been weeded in nearly a decade, and its entire content fits in less hard drive space uncompressed than you seem to be saying you use for e-mail in one month. You usually don't get those sorts of data numbers on mobile devices without streaming media habits. I'm not trying to be harsh here, I'm just trying to be realistic and understand what's going on. It's hard to help when you provide such vague details about what your actual usage habits are. These are critical questions to know the answers to if you're wanting to find the right solution. Spitballing and vague generalities can be fun, but we're talking about trying to find the right prepaid cellular plan for your needs here.
That said, I'm currently paying about $95 / month with AT&T with 450 anytime minutes, free nights and weekends, mobile to mobile (any carrier), unlimited text messages and umlimited data (grandfathered in).
Why wouldn't Virgin Mobile be a great option for me? Their unlimited plan is $55 / month and it looks like you get a $70 credit if you sign up for a new plan. Also, it doesn't appear they have any tricked up minute plans so if i went to the $45 plan (1200 anytime minutes) meaning it appears 1200 is 1200. Not any free additional minutes after 9pm, etc.
Why would Virgin Mobile be a great option for you? Yes, their wholly "unlimited" plan is $55/month, but nobody needs unlimited
anything. Instead of just immediately throwing a marketing buzzword at a problem for your solution, you need to know what you actually
need first... otherwise, you're probably just wasting money. How many
actual minutes do you use per month in total? Where are most of those minutes used - at work, at home, on the road? How many texts do you send? How much data do you actually need for critical functionality versus convenience/boredom usage? How much of those minutes and that data can be supplemented with separate home VoIP and internet usage? Are you tethering to your phone for data with a tablet or laptop and if so, is it necessary? Have you checked network coverage for your area of usage with all four providers to make sure you'll actually get reception with these MVNOs?
Telling me about your current plan only tells me that you've got the AT&T 450 anytime minute plan on a smartphone, it doesn't tell me what your actual usage is. Prepaid works best with hard facts, so you need to work with some hard numbers when shopping for service because there's no "in network" or "off peak" minutes. You get exactly what you pay for with the exclusion of "unlimited" service, which is vague and nebulous terminology used to exploit people's greediness and is usually couched with data throttling and undisclosed soft usage caps that they can use to terminate your service with. Looking solely at the bottom line in money spent per month for supposedly unmetered service isn't going to do you any favors.
A couple of questions:
1) How would this compare with other options based on my data and text needs?
2) is 1200 anytime only 1200 total? I can't see anything about nights and weekends or mobile to mobile being "free" on their site
3) ive never used it but being in the dallas fort worth area, it seems the coverage is pretty good
4) when i use wifi, that doesn't count against my data use, correct?
1) You provide some solid info on what those needs actually are, then some comparisons can be made to alternate options.
2) Yes.
3) Given you're in DFW, you've probably got decent coverage from all four carriers in the metroplex, which is good... but usually there's only a couple of those four that provides better than average service. Wireless providers get specific reputations in each metro area. If you've had good AT&T service over the years without a lot of network roaming or dropped calls, they're probably one of the better networks in the area. Keep that in mind. If Sprint has a bad local reputation, it might not be the best choice to go with a Sprint MVNO that doesn't allow for Verizon roaming.
4) That question reads vague as there's no quantifier of
what is using the WiFi and from where, especially in context of your claimed data requirements. If your phone is using your home internet connection through WiFi, then no... it
does not count against your data usage. If you're talking about using your phone as a WiFi hotspot for
other devices, then yes... it
does count against your data usage.
All this said, are you aware of the Airvoice pricing changes recently? $40 gets you "unlimited" talk and text with 1GB of data now. Pretty clean swap on your iPhone once you get it unlocked, excuse the network configuration changes.