Cell phones are one of the greatest inventions to come along
since the air conditioner. It’s hard to
imagine life without them. If the dog
runs away and everyone goes out looking for her the one finding her can simply
call everyone else home. In the old
days, the dog would be at home asleep while people were still looking for
her. Every day I see people shopping and
they take pictures of what they want to buy and send them to their significant
other. That person weighs in and the
buying decision is made. Who here has
gone to the grocery store and called home to see if there was anything else you
needed? You can send your kids out in
the neighborhood to play and then call them on their cell when it is time to
come in for dinner. Those are the most
basic uses. I know people who play games
until the battery dies and then plug it in and play some more on their phones. They give directions. They tell us who sings a particular
song. They text. They Twitter.
They are a phone book and a yellow pages all in one. So what could be the harm of these
phones? I can walk into my living room
and no one even says “Hello” to me. They
don’t look up from their phone screens.
Then there is the price. I see
commercial after commercial about how cheap it is to join a certain service but
when I’d do the math, it would come out about the same price for my
family. That’s where they get you; with
family plans. And then you can’t break
them anyway without a huge penalty. One
company will pay the penalty for you but their service is high priced and poor
quality. That’s another problem. I’ve known people who went on the plans with
the cheaper companies but the service was poor and the coverage was inferior to
say the least. They ended up switching
back. After all, what good is a cheap cell
phone if you can’t talk to anyone on it?
Someone said to me the other day, “If I could go back in time I would
buy shares of Verizon.” She has a
point. You either pay more for better
service or pay slightly less for poor service.
Even if you go with the second route, however, you are still paying a
lot of money for a cell phone. They used
to be relatively inexpensive. Now they
have data plans and renewal fees. And
you have to have a case or it’s going to look terrible after a couple of drops,
not to mention damaged. Then there’s
insurance. You’re going to drop your
phone. It’s going to happen. When it does it very well might break because
these things are very touchy and temperamental.
To buy a new one without a plan
is around $500. That means you need
insurance and that’s another addition to your bill. These phones are great. I can’t imagine life without them. But man, are they expensive. I don’t have the answer. Maybe one of you has a good story to tell.
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