herdtoDisney
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2010
- Messages
- 1,124
Wow, that Cricket plan sounds great-it's $25 in my zipcode. I have currently 5 phones with Verizon family plan, no data or smartphones. Would i have to buy 5 new phones? It's so confusing 

Please know that while it is true that Virgin and boost use sprints towers they do not have near the service of sprint phones. While it is nationwide its not as large. Same with contract at&t and prepaid at&t.
Wow, that Cricket plan sounds great-it's $25 in my zipcode. I have currently 5 phones with Verizon family plan, no data or smartphones. Would i have to buy 5 new phones? It's so confusing![]()
I think your VZ phones would work on Cricket because they are both CDMA networks. I read that while researching for my ds's phone.
True, even if you have unlimited data, if you spend a lot of time on Netflix or YouTube, it could put a strain on your monthly data usage and most phone companies will slow-down your data speed (my recommendation is if your phone makes use of Wi-Fi hotspots to use them for streaming video whenever said hotspots are available).
Verizon recently launched an Android smartphone for the prepaid market, but IMO, $80 is way too expensive for the service offered (I know in most places, VZW is often the best, and sometimes only carrier serving that area).
For those second-guessing this thread, prepaid has been the service of choice in many countries around the world -- seems here in the U.S., up until a couple of years ago, it was heavily-marketed to those who couldn't get the "more sexy" contract phones (i.e., couldn't pass a credit check). With the arrival of smartphones for a low flat monthly fee, that mindset has changed.
My best source for what's happening in the world of prepaid is www.prepaidphonenews.com -- make sure you bookmark it...[/QUOTE]
![]()
Please know that while it is true that Virgin and boost use sprints towers they do not have near the service of sprint phones. While it is nationwide its not as large. Same with contract at&t and prepaid at&t.
.
One side note, I currently have free roaming with my contract plan, and I use it a lot on the road. It doesn't appear that any of the prepaid plans have free roaming? (Anyone out there have free roaming on a prepaid plan?)
So true. VM and Boost actually run on the old Nextel network which is owned by Sprint. The coverage area is so much smaller. I got fed up with not having service when I travel that I went back to Verizon.
For those of you on straighttalk using an android phone;
Do you have issues using the data away from home? I did a google search and found a comment from someone who was very upset because she could not use data if she was are too far from her home zip code? Also in the official terms and conditions it says something about mobile web service not being available outside your coverage area. ( not sure how they define "YOUR" coverage area vs "their" coverage area? )
Are you allowed to YouTube or Internet radio? What I read made is sound like you can not?
Finally I notice that the coverage area map for android is very, very different than the non smart phone coverage.
Unfortunately it looks like I may have to go with Verizon. My wallet wants Virgin Mobile. I spend a lot of time in a lake area and it looks like Verizon my be my only hope for coverage. Sprints coverage map shows that I have coverage, but I know that at least with may current phone, I do not have coverage.
One side note, I currently have free roaming with my contract plan, and I use it a lot on the road. It doesn't appear that any of the prepaid plans have free roaming? (Anyone out there have free roaming on a prepaid plan?)
Anyone use Net10? The unlimited nationwide plan w free 411 looks pretty good at 50.00. Only thing is it looks like they only have one smart phone? Anyone know what towers they use? Coverage map looks like Verizon, but it is hard to tell as they don't let you zoom in much. Anyway to use any other phones with them?
I just checked my Verizon pre-paid plan and I would have to pay .20 cents a minute for roaming. Luckily I never have to roam. That could add up!
If you want nationwide coverage and have good AT&T coverage in your area, you also might want to look into StraightTalk prepaid. You can buy their SIM cards for $15, and use it in any unlocked or AT&T (or T-Mobile, but their coverage is limited) cell phone.
I bought my wife a new AT&T Fusion Go-Phone (Android touch-screen) for $110 at Walmart. I ordered a $15 SIM card from StraightTalk and it will be here Friday. I've been playing around with the phone, and have it connected to our WiFi, and it's very nice. I'll give an update after getting everything going.
We've had StraightTalk for several years, and it's been great. For $45, I get unlimited voice, text and data. They don't advertise any limits for the data, but word on the street is if you go over 2-3 GB a month, they'll cut off your data. You can call and get it reactivated, but if you go over more than a couple of times, they might cancel your service. This is actually quite generous, as most plans charge $45 or more just for 2GB of data, not including voice or texting.
To use the Fusion with Straight Talk, do you need to have the phone unlocked? If not, I think I will try it for DH phone. We pay $50 a month with AT&T for unlimited talk and text but he can't use the data without a plan.