On Mar 16, 2012, at 12:17 PM, Jay Abraham wrote:
> I made the decision about 9 months ago to drop down to a metered plan from unlimited. I figured I would save money and even though I could see the argument for future proofing, the contract says plans can be changed at any time so there wasn't any benefit for keeping unlimited. I dropped to the 200Mb plan and when I travel I just go online and upgrade to the 2GB plan (now it's 3GB). If you do it online, you can get it for the pro-rated period as few as a couple of days.
>
> Takes a little bit more active management but saves money and now allows me to use the Hot Spot option which wasn't allowed with unlimited (AFAIK).
>
> Jay
>
> On Mar 16, 2012, at 1:31 PM, N.A. Nada wrote:
>
> >
> > On Mar 16, 2012, at 8:00 AM, Brent wrote:
> >
> > > http://lifehacker.com/5893896/that-coveted-unlimited-data-plan-might-be-costing-you-money
> > >
> > > Sent to you by Brent via Google Reader: That Coveted Unlimited Data
> > > Plan Might Be Costing You Money [Saving Money] via Lifehacker by
> > > Whitson Gordon on 3/16/12
> > > Everyone has been looking for ways to keep their unlimited data plan
> > > ever since carriers started getting rid of them, but a new study by
> > > Consumer Reports shows that nearly half of those people could save $10
> > > by switching to a metered plan. More »
> >
> > I read a similar article at Gizmodo the day before. So Whitson reads Casey. Casey had some doubt about the wisdom of changing to a minimal plan. He called his doubt future-proofing. That is the exact argument that I had with myself when they made the change, and the one that I review every month, because I stayed with the grandfathered "unlimited plan".
> >
> > http://gizmodo.com/5893743/do-you-really-need-an-unlimited-data-plan-spoiler-no
> >
> > With the new streaming services, cloud back-ups, and social networking (which I use the bare minimum of, but some of my real friends use a ton of) keep driving up the amount of data I use.
> >
> > I used to travel for work, and sometimes watched movies on my iPhone. My meager data usage at that time was between 1.7 and just under 3 GB. Right in the sweet spot for throttling, but before they began throttling. So I opted to keep the plan. Right now I don't travel for work and my usage is between 80 and 300 MB. The problem is I know that a single day of driving using the iPhone for directions can rack up 200 MB just to put the maps behind the location indicator. I'm looking for a job where I travel again.
> >
> > If there were a reasonable "pay for what you use" or a roll-over plan for data, I would drop to a lower plan in a heart beat, but there isn't. But the pricing structure is currently "pay us to much each month or change a ridiculously huge overage usage charge" plan. Commonly known as price gouging or "hose the customer, since we have them locked in".
> >
> > If there is ever a class action suit about the monopolistic actions by AT&T, then I may one day be vindicated for staying with the "unlimited plan", and will be able to say AT&T got what they deserved. The denial of the "merger" with T-Mobile gives me a sliver of hope in this regard.
> >
> > the other Brent
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
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