Jump to content

Interim phone or renew contract?


SWMich4G

Recommended Posts

I'm in dire need of a new phone, but I don't want to upgrade a month or two before the 800MHz phones become available. 

 

Option A:  I could just renew my contract now and get a 1900 LTE phone with the upgrade discount, and then buy a full price 800 LTE phone when they come out and sell the 1900 one.  I'll start my 2 year cycle right away, but will have to buy a brand new phone at full price in a few months (probably around $650).  I also won't be saving that much with the upgrade vs a used phone unless I get the newest phone (GS4), but in that case I'll actually make money on the resale. 

 

Option B: I could buy a used 1900 LTE phone now (probably Photon Q), and save my upgrade for a few months until the 800 LTE phones come out.  This delays my upgrade until that time, but maximizes the savings from it by getting a brand new phone. The used price of the Photon Q is only about $50 more than the upgrade discounted price. 

 

Has anyone been in a similar situation when waiting for a certain phone to come out?  What is the most economical solution?  My TP2 doesn't even download weather data anymore, can't run sensorly, is too slow and small to use the internet for more than a quick google search, and freezes pretty often when doing the most basic things like texting.  I don't want to take Option C and wait it out since I might not even like the first 800 LTE phones, and we don't know for sure when they'll be out.  I'd appreciate any input you can give. :)

 

EDIT: If it matters, I'm on SERO 500, and would be upgrading to the SERO-P 500 whenever I get a new phone. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If my family completely upgrades in the coming month (when all of us are eligible for early upgrade), I'll probably grab a GS4 and sell my old GS2. Then when tri-band phones come out, I'll sell the GS4 and utilize the funds from the sale to acquire the tri-band device. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If my family completely upgrades in the coming month (when all of us are eligible for early upgrade), I'll probably grab a GS4 and sell my old GS2. Then when tri-band phones come out, I'll sell the GS4 and utilize the funds from the sale to acquire the tri-band device. 

exactly what im going to do. Maybe even a tri band s4

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm a little afraid of taking the jump to a virtual keyboard.  I'm sure it's not as bad on a big screen like a GS4, but it still can't be as good as a physical one.  I know I'll have to go to one soon, but I'm still scared.  :P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm a little afraid of taking the jump to a virtual keyboard.  I'm sure it's not as bad on a big screen like a GS4, but it still can't be as good as a physical one.  I know I'll have to go to one soon, but I'm still scared.  :P

You'll pick up on the touch-screen keyboard pretty fast, I type extremely fast with my iPhone, when I had my S3 it sucked at texting.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

You'll pick up on the touch-screen keyboard pretty fast, I type extremely fast with my iPhone, when I had my S3 it sucked at texting.

What's the difference between you typing on the S3 vs the iPhone?  Or is it just that the S3 was the first virtual keyboard you used and you were still learning? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What's the difference between you typing on the S3 vs the iPhone? Or is it just that the S3 was the first virtual keyboard you used and you were still learning?

Not entirely sure, I have had every iPhone since they came out so perhaps I am just used to the way iOS does things.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Try out Swiftkey on Android and you'll never look back.

Truth. 

 

Can you renew your contract without getting a phone, then get a phone off ebay saving the upgrade for later when the 800 phones are released?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Truth. 

 

Can you renew your contract without getting a phone, then get a phone off ebay saving the upgrade for later when the 800 phones are released?

 

You can just by a phone off eBay and add it to your line then renew your contract later when you decide to get the triband phone. I've done it a couple times in the past while I was waiting on a phone that I wanted, but didn't come out for a few months.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

agree!  I run this keyboard on every android device I own, never disappointed me...

more so that that i can't stand the lack of hard press buttons on the iphone i.e. accessing numbers from the letters screen. the multi language support is awesome on swiftkey, and you do not even need to switch the keyboard language. It just works with whatever language that you type/flow.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You can just by a phone off eBay and add it to your line then renew your contract later when you decide to get the triband phone. I've done it a couple times in the past while I was waiting on a phone that I wanted, but didn't come out for a few months.

I have a upgrade due but I was hoping I could renew and not have to use my upgrade yet. I bought an evo 3D with my last upgrade 2 years ago, after about 13 months I had had it with that phone and got an evo LTE off ebay. I like my evo LTE and I like my sero plan particularly now with NV rolling along. But I know any phone I get now wont have 800 or possibly 2500 radios. I can see myself happily using the evo until next summer (2014) using the upgrade then, and being able to upgrade/renewal the following summer (2015). 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Just remember, every month you go without upgrading, you have to wait another month to get the next one.

 

I always upgrade the second I can :)

 

If you don't want the phone, sell it.

 

Ya but I'm also still on regular SERO, so every month with a new phone would cost me $20 more on my bill since they'll force me to upgrade to SERO-P. It comes close to cancelling out ($400 off every 24 months = $16.67 a month).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

 

Ya but I'm also still on regular SERO, so every month with a new phone would cost me $20 more on my bill since they'll force me to upgrade to SERO-P. It comes close to cancelling out ($400 off every 24 months = $16.67 a month).

 

You can always downgrade back to your old handset.

 

I just did this with the GS4.  Made a nice tidy little profit.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • large.unreadcontent.png.6ef00db54e758d06

  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • Posts

    • Dish network down since 3:31am Signalcheck Pro reports the Dish Network, at least the site at Scioto-Darby Rd Near I-270  in Columbus Ohio, was last operational at 3:31am. I normally pickup signal from two other Dish sites as well.  Reported via downdetector.com as Boost Infinite but one is such a lonely number. Tried to manually reconnect to Dish, but network is not appearing. Hopefully scheduled maintenance.
    • Probably a lot of Midwest towers. Slight bias since Nebraska is a weird market, but there are tons of USCC sites that T-Mobile isn't yet co-located on. Think a similar situation in Iowa, Wisconsin, and Missouri. But some other markets, like yours, probably don't have that issue!
    • Sticky Customers - YES, and leave them flip to the T-Mobile PLMN when needed and they will be even more likely to Stick.
    • It seems to me that if the goal is to improve rural, the US Cellular buy-out would get them only part of the way there, considering there are plenty of rural areas that US Cellular does not serve.  But I also have a hard time reading it the way I think that article is, that the cost of this deal comes straight out of the $9 billion.  I mean, they're getting spectrum for their existing operations in US Cellular markets, including places that I wouldn't call rural.  (Roanoke, VA is the 9th largest city in the state, for example.)  It seems like some of it should be allocated to rural expansion, but certainly not the whole purchase price. There's also something to be said for getting the customer base of potentially sticky customers who have been used to US Cellular being the only game in town for potentially decades. - Trip
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...