I want one of the new Moto X's so bad it hurts. The feature set is impressive, and it's vanilla android, no carrier UI/slowdown/bloatware.

Josh Reynolds, Chief Information Officer
SPITwSPOTS, www.spitwspots.com <http://www.spitwspots.com>

On 09/17/2014 06:42 PM, Eric Kuhnke via Af wrote:
Bought a Oneplus One 64GB and couldn't be happier. Fantastic 5.5" screen,
unlocked Android 4.4 (Cyanogenmod 11), no carrier crapware.

faster CPU than a galaxy note 3, and 3GB of RAM.

$350 if you can get an invite.

On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 7:41 PM, CBB - Jay Fuller via Af <af@afmug.com>
wrote:

Agree.  I waited over a year after 4GLTE launched here to get a 4g phone
and when I did, it came off Ebay.  Still have that phone...used PDAnet to
tether the old phone ; went a different route on this phone cause I knew
i'd be exceeding USB speeds pretty easily. :)

   ----- Original Message -----
   From: Ken Hohhof via Af
   To: af@afmug.com
   Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 5:41 PM
   Subject: Re: [AFMUG] i've never found an answer to this....cellular


   What I think the cellcos (especially Sprint) do badly is not explain to
the
   people with 3G devices that they need to upgrade them to 4G for the
higher
   speed, even if that loses you a grandfathered plan.  I believe the
   transition to 4G/LTE has actually made 3G perform worse.  I'm not sure
why,
   maybe they take spectrum away from 3G at the towers and give it to 4G.
But
   people don't understand this, all they see is their speeds are in the
   toilet, so the last thing they are going to do is buy a new device and
sign
   a new contract with the company that's responsible for their crappy
service.

   At a minimum, they should be informing their customers of this.  Like we
   sometimes have to tell people with a 10 year old computer and a 10 year
old
   router that they need to upgrade.  But really, they should have some
kind of
   program to market the 4G upgrade to existing 3G customers with come kind
of
   discount that encourages people to upgrade and stay customers.

   Instead, I think they lose customers to another cellco (or to a WISP!),
   because the customer thinks the cellco just has crappy service.



   -----Original Message-----
   From: Chris Wright via Af
   Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 5:20 PM
   To: af@afmug.com
   Subject: Re: [AFMUG] i've never found an answer to this....cellular

   You'd wind up pissing off a lot of legacy users and creating more bad
press
   than it's worth.

   Chris Wright
   Velociter Wireless

   -----Original Message-----
   From: Af [mailto:af-bounces+chris=velociter....@afmug.com] On Behalf Of
   CBB - Jay Fuller via Af
   Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 2:52 PM
   To: af@afmug.com; memb...@wispa.org
   Subject: [AFMUG] i've never found an answer to this....cellular


   Ok, so, when you have an "unlimited card" and you're lucky to never have
   purchased another device, and it's still unlimited, why can't / why
DOESN'T
   the cellular company just end your unlimited option and force you onto
   something else?

   Is it a billing issue?  Something their systems can't handle?   I've
always
   wondered why that is.

   Surely it's not something "legal", unless it's the fact you signed a
   contract stating this is the plan i want, and they can't change the plan
off
   what you signed up for?

   (hey! that makes sense...actually)

   Thoughts?

   I guess they could say we're no longer offering that plan and you must
sign
   up for a new plan or your phone will be terminated?
   Too many people on old plans to take that risk?






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