iPhone Mixed Family Plan Pricing Revealed
Posted by junger | July 1st, 2008
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Got a first-gen iPhone you want to mix with a new, 3G unit in an AT&T family plan?
Here's how it's going to be priced, according to an AT&T CSR I spoke to today (this is assuming you go with the lowest, 450/700 minute plan):
- The phones share a voice plan ($69.99 for 2 units)
- The 3G model pays a monthly $30 data fee
- The EDGE model pays its normal $20 data fee
- The EDGE model still gets its 200 text messages built in
- The 3G model can add text messages at the indidividual rate ($5/month for 200, $15 for 1500, $20 for unlimited)
Total that up — for a 2 person family with one 3G iPhone and one EDGE iPhone, both at the lowest plan:
$69.99 (voice)
$30 (3G data)
$20 (2G data)
$5 (200 text messages for 3G)
=
$124.99
Presumably, you will pay the data rate for each additional iPhone added and $9.99 more for voice, so another EDGE phone would be $29.99 more and another 3G phone would be $39.99 more.
Compare that to the 2 line, 3G-only FamilyTalk plan.

At first, it seems reasonable — but consider that two individual plans would cost you only $10 more and you'd get 200 more voice minutes.
When I spoke to the CSR today, she had to go to a higher-up to find out this info — so hopefully AT&T gets their act together and distributes it to store reps soon.
Now that Debbie has an iPhone, this is most likely the route we're going (especially since she gets to keep her text messages).
We Got An iPhone: w00t
Posted by junger | March 26th, 2008
I've been wanting to post about this for awhile, but now I actually can: Debbie got an iPhone for her birthday on Tuesday.
Last week when I was in Boston, AT&T starting selling refurb 8GB iPhones online … for $249.
Her cellphone contract with Sprint is up, but we had pretty much decided to wait until the 3G version came out (in June, so says Kevin Rose). But at $350 less than when it first came out … it was a no-brainer.
So now, she has an iPhone. It's sweet, obviously.
As she was playing around with it, she commented on how the novelty of it won't wear off. She's absolutely right, but it's not the novelty … it's the practicality. We always find ourselves wanting to find directions or stores or a piece of info when we're on the road; now, we can.
The Wii is a novel gadget — fun to play, but gets old after awhile. Using the iPhone won't. (Plus, she can check facebook from anywhere.)
We're heading out to California for a week-long vacation in May, and having fingertip access to the Internet while on the road is going to be huge. That alone is worth the investment.
Since it looks like AT&T is no longer selling the units online, I'd say it was a pretty sweet deal. If we decide to upgrade her to 3G in the future, we'll figure it out then … but I'm just trying to find a way to get out of my Sprint contract (one year left … anyone?) without paying up the wazoo.
PS - with the new SDK, it would be HUGE to have a Vonage app for the iPhone. That way we could make calls using our home number on the iPhone — it wouldn't waste minutes and be a great option if AT&T service is as bad as Sprint's in our place (we don't get any Sprint reception). VoIP is coming — Vonage, please get in on it.
iPhone 2.0: What I Need to Switch
Posted by junger | December 12th, 2007

Word is out on the street that iPhone 2.0 will be coming next year, and as someone who didn't get one the first time around, I'm excited.
Since I was advised against getting an iPhone by some trusted advisers, I've made a list of the things I need in an iPhone before I decide to make (what could be) a costly switch.
- Calls Over Wi-Fi
I don't get cell phone service in my house — what if I buy an iPhone and it doesn't work in here, either? The iPhone is smart enough to switch to WiFi when you're surfing the Web. Do the same for voice calls. - Calls Over Skype
Skype is an important communication method for a lot of people — there's no reason you shouldn't be able to use it on an iPhone. - More Storage
This one seems the most likely, based on presumed more flash memory and time to make the battery last longer. The two versions available, 8GB and 16GB, are good starts, but they're not replacing my iPod.
What are you looking for in iPhone 2.0? What would make you switch?


