Giving up the land line.
Posted: Fri Aug 27, 2004 10:48 am
I gave mine up (with the aquisition of a cable modem for my computer) 2 years ago and have never looked back. This is a great column by Ralph Bristol on this very subject. Join the ranks and tell that phone company to stick it!!
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Giving up the land line
Source: http://www.ralphbristol.com
It's true that old habits die hard. Every month, I write a check to my phone company for service I rarely use. I talk an average of about 600 minutes a month on my cell phone and maybe 30 minutes on my home phone that's tethered to the wall. When someone first told me that they had cancelled their home phone service altogether and use only a cell phone, I thought that sounded a little too "cutting edge" for me. When I saw the TV commercial featuring the "relic from the past," the phone with a cord attached, I thought they were getting a little ahead of themselves.
Now I'm not so sure. A few weeks ago, I started thinking about the possibility of canceling my home phone service and upgrading my cell phone service. For what I'm paying for the two, I could easily get unlimited service on my cell phone, along with voice mail and any other feature I would ever use. I'm not sure what's holding me back, other than that evasive "unknown."
There's something vaguely uneasy about doing without something that I've had all my life - a phone that plugs into my wall. I can't imagine what perils might befall me if I go cold turkey on the land line, but it's still hard to make that jump.
It would be hardly any trouble at all to notify my circle of friends, family and business associates that I now have only one phone number instead of two. One number should make their life easier. They won't have to decide, "Which number should I use to call Ralph -- his home number or his cell?" When I give people a phone number to use, I won't have to decide which number to give them. I'll have only one.
There's always the chance that I'll lose my cell phone (again) and will have to be without a phone until I get a new one. But that has happened only once and I had a new phone within about 24 hours. So that's no big deal. When the battery goes dead, I can still use it while it's charging, either at home, in the car or the office.
In short, I can think of no good reason to continue to pay two phone bills instead of one, other than that natural hesitation to change.
This is my last step in the decision-making process - to talk it over with you and see if you can think of something I may have missed. Unless you talk me out of it, I'm pretty sure I'm going to do it. I'm going to cut myself free from that communications umbilical cord to which I've been tethered for my entire life.
Speak now or forever hold your peace.
---------------------------------------
Giving up the land line
Source: http://www.ralphbristol.com
It's true that old habits die hard. Every month, I write a check to my phone company for service I rarely use. I talk an average of about 600 minutes a month on my cell phone and maybe 30 minutes on my home phone that's tethered to the wall. When someone first told me that they had cancelled their home phone service altogether and use only a cell phone, I thought that sounded a little too "cutting edge" for me. When I saw the TV commercial featuring the "relic from the past," the phone with a cord attached, I thought they were getting a little ahead of themselves.
Now I'm not so sure. A few weeks ago, I started thinking about the possibility of canceling my home phone service and upgrading my cell phone service. For what I'm paying for the two, I could easily get unlimited service on my cell phone, along with voice mail and any other feature I would ever use. I'm not sure what's holding me back, other than that evasive "unknown."
There's something vaguely uneasy about doing without something that I've had all my life - a phone that plugs into my wall. I can't imagine what perils might befall me if I go cold turkey on the land line, but it's still hard to make that jump.
It would be hardly any trouble at all to notify my circle of friends, family and business associates that I now have only one phone number instead of two. One number should make their life easier. They won't have to decide, "Which number should I use to call Ralph -- his home number or his cell?" When I give people a phone number to use, I won't have to decide which number to give them. I'll have only one.
There's always the chance that I'll lose my cell phone (again) and will have to be without a phone until I get a new one. But that has happened only once and I had a new phone within about 24 hours. So that's no big deal. When the battery goes dead, I can still use it while it's charging, either at home, in the car or the office.
In short, I can think of no good reason to continue to pay two phone bills instead of one, other than that natural hesitation to change.
This is my last step in the decision-making process - to talk it over with you and see if you can think of something I may have missed. Unless you talk me out of it, I'm pretty sure I'm going to do it. I'm going to cut myself free from that communications umbilical cord to which I've been tethered for my entire life.
Speak now or forever hold your peace.