Comments on: The rising cost of texting
Text message prices have risen as quickly as gas prices at the pump over the past two years. What gives?
Text message prices have risen as quickly as gas prices at the pump over the past two years. What gives?
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"I'm old, and my failure to embrace/understand the advantages/convenience/culture of texting as it becomes prevalent in our society is something I take pride in."
The fact that people have the ability to send each other inane messages on a whim is not some sign of weakness of character. Text messaging allows such communications, where once they would have been unwieldy. Certain 'overhead' aspects of phone calls, such as waiting for the callee to allow initiation of the communication, the need for a greeting, the inevitable inclusion of subjects extraneous to the caller's desired message (in cases when there is a definite desired message), and the need for a 'goodbye' exchange make phone calls unacceptable for the constant flow of ideas in an impromptu manner.
Certainly some people may text unnecessarily, but now like never before they have the technology to exchange ideas as they arise. Just as a call is ideal for communications which are expected to take several minutes or longer (because in such cases the 'overhead' is justifiable), text messages are ideal for short, sporadic communications.
Returning to the topic of the article, per-message prices for text messaging are certainly outrageously expensive, considering the provider's cost to send the message. For anyone who sends a very small number of texts, the price may not be too much of a problem. For anyone who sends a lot of them (I, for example, send I would say at least 50 a day), unlimited plans seem reasonably priced for the services that are provided.
And what some of you might not realize, is that drop calls... Well, I never had one in Europe... you can make clear calls anywhere anytime... ATT is terrible and overpriced!!! Cellular service in the US is 10 years being the rest of the world!!!
ATT : get your coverage fixed for voice calls!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! P.S. The "fewest dropped call" slogan is not something to be prouid of....
SWITCH TO HELIO!!!
For $65 a month you get 500 minutes, unlimited nights and weekends, and unlimited Data (which included internet at 3G speeds, unlimited txting and unlimited picture/video messaging).
I'm a cheap SOB, trust me when I say this is by far the BEST deal out there. PLUS... you can buy a Helio Ocean on eBay for like $89 (that might have went down since I got mine).
But there is a way around all of this. The iPhone and other phones can get around the whole SMS network by either using Edge or the 3G network for instant messages. Yahoo has clients for many phones and the iPhone can use the web-based service presently (I imagine the App Store will have a native application soon). I have also used Google's Instant Messaging service with my iPhone.
As soon as the phone carriers see SMS not being used, they'll lower the prices.
Oh, and how to keep the daughter from running up a huge SMS bill?
Give her a budget for cell phone usages to use any way she wishes and make her responsible for paying the bill. Believe me, after the first month she goes over her budget, she'll stop texting people just to text them.
It's a freakin' phone! Texting is for the birds, you can get more done via voice in the same amount of time even if you have to conference in others.
I don't have a data plan on my phone. If I want a data plan it will be for an ultra laptop where I can send REAL email and even videocall if needed and bandwidth available.
The only SMS messages I get are from AT&T's service and they don't cost me anything.
But are the wireless companies ripping SMS texters off...YOU BET! they will nickel and dime you to death unless you get an unlimited plan.
Besides, if it ever came to be a problem and I had to switch, I'd run mobile web and use AIM to message phone numbers all day.
Simple... the more they raise the rates, the more people will end up subscribing to text messaging plans. They're driving their customers like a herd of cattle. The companies would much prefer guaranteed $10-$20 per month revenue. I'm sure some people subscribe to a text plan even though they'd spend less if they didn't.
Even though people occasionally send me text messages (I tell them not to... and I'm going to start hitting them up $.20 for every one they send me), I've never actually had more than $2 in one month. Since I don't do texting, it makes no sense for me to subscribe to a plan, when I've never had over $2 per month and many months I have $0. 00 in text charges. If I get spam, they hear about it and I get them to take it off. It does really anger me that they charge for incoming when it costs them nothing. It's quite a rip-off. I'm sure they'll get to $1 per text message if you don't have a text plan. Just give the sheisters another year or two.
BTW.. texting is .08 per message.... I have nationwide coverage and all my minutes roll-over. Been using PagePlus for 2 years now! European carriers are 60% prepaid plans!
However, on SMS, the carriers have raised rates before they have hooked the consumer. The carriers should be running special promotions and dropping rates to get the non-users on board. Instead, they choose to raise rates, thus inhibiting those not already users from trying the service or texting more.
I, for one, do not understand this mentality. Why would someone pay for a package deal when they rarely text to begin with? The carriers need to hook the consumer first, and then raise rates and push to the packages. They are doing this process backwards...
- by Amyaz July 3, 2008 10:27 AM PDT
- great timely story! i just added the 200 texts per month to my at&t plan after i had to pay $20 for texting. wish they'd warned me about the increase.
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Showing 3 of 4 pages (80 Comments)it's too bad texting isn't included in the data plan on the new iphone. would have been a good way for me to justify the $30 extra for the data plan (and to sign on for a new 2 year agreement).