Talk
Time (also known as Air Time) is the total amount phone use,
typically measured in minutes, for both call placed and calls
received. Most monthly calling plans include a specific allowance of
talk time, frequently divided into peak and off-peak minutes, for a
flat monthly fee. Any talk time used over this allowance will cost
extra, usually at comparatively much higher per-minute rates.
Peak Minutes (also know as Anytime or Whenever minutes)
are talk time minutes used during the prime calling periods when
the carrier networks are most active, typically between 6am and
9pm Monday through Friday. Because of this demand, Peak Minutes
are expensive. Plans that include more Peak Minutes typically
have higher monthly fees.
Off-Peak Minutes (also known as Night and Weekend
Minutes) are Talk Time minutes used outside of prime calling
periods (typically at night and on weekends) when the carriers
are least active. Off-Peak Minutes are the least expensive Talk
Time minutes and are often included in generous quantities
(frequently unlimited) even in many inexpensive plans. Customers
who expect to use their phone frequently at night and on
weekends should make sure to choose a plan with a generous
allowance of Off-Peak minutes.

Roaming
refers to any wireless phone use outside of a customer's home
calling area or carrier network coverage. Because most phones
feature multiple network capabilities, Roaming agreements between
carriers let customers use their phones over a much wider area than
a carrier's network service coverage. However, customers typically
pay significantly more than even Peak Minute rates for using this
capability. Unless a calling plan specifically offers no Roaming
charges, this Talk Time is usually the most expensive. International
Roaming is possible with some wireless phones, and accordingly is
even more expensive. Frequent travelers are best served with plans
that feature no roaming charges.

Long
Distance charges may apply to calls that are placed to
numbers outside your local area codes. Because Talk Time charges
also apply, wireless Long distance calls can be more expensive than
on a land-line phone. However, all carriers offer a selection of
calling plans that include free Long Distance service where all
domestic calls placed are billed at only the applicable Talk Time
rates. For frequent long distance callers, these plans are often
more cost effective than landline long distance service.
Additional Talk Time (also known as Additional Minutes) is
the amount of wireless phone use that exceeds your allowance of
Peak- or Off-Peak Minutes or both. After Roaming charges, these
Additional Talk Time minutes are the most common cause of
unexpectedly high wireless phone bills.

Mobile-to-Mobile Minutes (also known as In-Network Minutes)
are minutes used for calling or receiving calls from another
customer on your carrier's service network. When included in a
calling plan, are not measured as Peak- or Off-Peak Minutes and are
tallied in a third distinct category. When offered as an unlimited
allowance on some carrier plans, Mobile-to-Mobile calling becomes
especially valuable with friends and family who have service from
the same carrier, effectively making any wireless-to-wireless call
between them free.

Data
Services including multimedia messaging, downloads, wireless
Web access and wireless modem capabilities are typically optional
carrier plan services that are offered for an additional charge,
either separately or bundled together as packages. Unlike voice
service, Data Services come in many forms and are packaged and
priced in many different ways from per-message charges for text
messaging to bulk charges (per megabyte) for all data (non-voice
connection service) sent or received by a wireless phone to
unlimited data plans for a flat monthly fee. Carrier by carrier,
most of these services require a separate subscription. In some
carriers, the most popular Data Services are often featured in
bundles or packages suited to typical wireless customer profiles,
for example Instant Messaging or Wireless Calendar or Contact Book
Synchronization. A customer planning to use their wireless phone for
more than just talk can find some very significant savings in
reviewing these optional services or packages carefully.

Types of Calling Plans
With few exceptions, most carrier calling plans fall into one of
these categories:
Local
Plans
Regional
Plans
National
Plans
Shared
Plans (also known as Family Plans)
Prepaid
Plans (also known as Pay-As-You-Go Plans)

Local Plans
The most geographically limited plans where a customer would pay
extra for any wireless phone use outside of a relatively small local
carrier network service area, typically a metropolitan area and the
adjacent suburbs. Many local plans do not include long distance but
will connect any long distance calls with a per-minute surcharge in
addition to any applicable Talk Time minutes. While these plans
carry the lowest basic monthly fees, frequent out-of-area travel use
(Roaming) or long distance surcharges can make monthly bills
skyrocket above the cost of comparable Regional or National plans.
Local plans are most cost-effective when a customer doesn't venture
too far from home or place frequent long distance calls.

Regional Plans
Regional Plans typically offer the most economical Talk Time
per-minute rates over a much larger multi-state area or Region, for
example the entire Northeastern or Southwestern U.S. Only calls
placed or received while outside this area will incur additional
Roaming surcharges. While not universal, more carriers are offering
included long distance service in Regional plans. Customers who
frequently call or travel to regional areas outside their carrier's
Local service area will find the best value in Regional calling
plans. Be sure to check local and regional carrier coverage maps
carefully for calling area eligibility.

National Plans
National Plans carry somewhat higher per-minute rates, but they
permit wireless phone use anywhere in the country with no extra
charge for roaming and/or for long distance calls when on an
approved network. These plans are best for wireless travelers or
customers that are simply willing to pay a bit more for freedom from
worry about where, when and to whom they are calling.

Shared Plans
Shared Plans give two or more wireless customers their own phone and
separate phone numbers, while sharing a common allowance of minutes.
These plans offer a lower cost per minute than separate wireless
plans that add up to the same number of minutes. As a greater bonus,
Shared Plans often reduce costs by addressing common multi-phone
problems, for example some wireless users frequently exceed their
allowance of minutes, while others don't or some wireless customers
use primarily Peak Minutes while others use more Off-Peak Minutes.
Best of all, Shared Plan usage is summarized on a single wireless
bill. Cumulative call timers and call restriction capabilities on
each phone as well as online network usage monitors can help Shared
Plan customers avoid surprises in their monthly wireless bill.

Prepaid Plans
Prepaid (also known as Pay-As-You-Go) service is an option for
customers who do not wish to process a credit application or expect
to use their phone very infrequently or only for emergencies.
Prepaid Service per-minute rates can be more expensive than monthly
Local, Regional, National or Shared Plans and purchased minutes can
expire after 90 to 120 days. On the plus side, Prepaid Service
phones are usually inexpensive, and increasingly stylish and capable
models are offered with standard calling features such as voicemail,
call waiting, as well as optional Data Service features such as
Messaging and Wireless Web similar to those sold with conventional
calling plans.

Wireless Security
Today's wireless phones enable you to receive and send instant
messages, check or send e-mails, and synchronize with your PC
contacts, e-mail, calendars, and more. These features make the truly
wireless lifestyle a reality; but they also make keeping your phone
secure even more important. We recommend taking the following steps
to make sure that the wealth of information stored on your wireless
phone stays secure:
-
Treat your phone like the valuable data vault
that it is. Would you leave your personal directory, calendar,
schedule, or credit information out in the open without being
secured? The same rules should apply to your wireless phone.
-
Lock your phone. Most phones have locking
features that prevent strangers from accessing the phones
functions or network services without knowing a user-defined
code key.
-
Delete sensitive e-mails, text messages, and
IM conversations from your phone. Most phones with messaging
capabilities allow you to limit what's stored in the phone's
flash memory.
-
Control access to your phone's short-range
wireless features. Infrared and Bluetooth technology allow you
to synchronize to other devices without cords or cables, but you
shouldn't leave these features on when you aren't using them.
Some phones also let you set passwords or code keys for
accessing these functions either directly or remotely.

Cell Phone Basics
Each Carrier (also known as Service Provider) offers dozens of
wireless phones ranging from inexpensive (often free after rebates
with a new service agreement) to expensive multi-function Smart
Phone devices that cost several hundred dollars. Choosing among them
can be intimidating to anyone, especially without a basic
understanding of the typical and sometimes more exclusive features
that distinguish one model from the next. Deciding which are
features most important will help you select the cell phone that
best meets your needs.

Size and Weight
Wireless phones are generally much smaller and lighter than their
predecessors of just a few years ago, and they still come in a wide
range of sizes and shapes. Tiny phones that weigh less than three
ounces contrast markedly with Smart Phones that make capable
handheld organizers and tip the scales at nearly half a pound.
Ultra-compact phones are the easiest to carry and slip comfortably
into a shirt pocket or a evening clutch. However, some users prefer
a phone with a more substantial feel to it, with a larger screen
that is easier to read and keypad that is more comfortable to use.
Think about how you'll use and carry your phone when considering the
size and weight that's right for you.

Design
Most modern phones are either bar shaped or feature a clamshell
design that flips open to reveal an internal screen and keypad.
Clamshell phones can be more compact without sacrificing display and
keypad size, though there are several popular bar shaped phones that
fit in the ultra-compact category. The clamshell designs protect the
phone's display when not in use, and some feature an additional
external display that can show Caller ID, phone information or
network status. A few innovative designs fall outside these two
categories with features such as sliding covers, QWERTY keyboards,
or twist-open swivel type mechanisms. Outside of overall appearance
and mechanical differences, there are very few functional advantages
from one style to the next, and design selections are often based on
personal preference.

Network Technology
Your local service area may feature a wealth of available carrier
options, and it may not. Each carrier uses a predominant technology
for providing cellular service to its wireless customers. There are
some technical differences between the two predominant technologies
in use-CDMA (used by Verizon Wireless, Sprint PCS, Nextel, Alltel,
CellularOne, and Western Wireless) and GSM (used by Cingular and
T-Mobile and others including most of the carriers in Europe and
Asia). However the general performance characteristics of both are
comparable, and the only real significance is that these
technologies are incompatible with each other. That means that as a
customer you can't buy a phone from one carrier and subsequently use
it on another carrier's network.
If the ability to use your
phone overseas ( international roaming) is important to you,
consider the GSM network carriers and a "world-band" phone that also
works on the GSM frequencies used abroad. These carriers and phones
allow you to make and receive calls while traveling in many
countries in Europe and Asia, though usually at a much higher cost
per minute talk time.
As a subset of the CDMA
compatible choices, Nextel iDEN phones feature a widely-known and
often indispensable push-to-talk option (walkie-talkie) feature.
However, while most other CDMA compatible phones are at least
capable of Roaming on other CDMA host carrier networks, Nextel iDEN
phones only work within Nextel network service areas. If there is no
Nextel network signal present, a Nextel iDEN phone will not work at
all.

Screen Size and Color
Larger screens that display sixty-five or even two-hundred sixty-two
thousand colors are increasingly common, even on inexpensive cell
phones. These bright, colorful displays can make it somewhat easier
to read and navigate increasingly extensive feature phone menus, and
they make a significant difference when using Data Services such as
Instant Messaging, sharing Digital Photos or Wireless Web Browsing.
However, phones with dual color displays are generally more
expensive to purchase at the beginning and often have reduced talk
time and standby capacity due to increased power consumption.

Battery Life
With current battery technologies, even the most inexpensive phones
deliver hours of talk time and multiple days of standby operation
(phone power on to receive incoming calls). Even so, if a customer
spends several hours each day talking on the phone, they would
benefit from the longer life of an extended-capacity battery. Phone
use, network conditions and a number of other conditions (even the
weather) affect battery life and talk time duration. While most
wireless phones approach the maximum battery life figures provided
by manufacturers and carriers, these numbers should be only be used
as comparative measures between different models. Typically separate
figures are provided for talk time and standby operation. Customers
who use their phones a lot should seek out a phone with a greater
talk time capacity or purchase an extended-capacity battery if
available. Wireless subscribers who are frequently away from their
home or office for long stretches should consider a phone with a
longer standby capacity or purchase an additional travel charger for
their home or car charger for their automobile.

Phone Book Capacity
Every modern wireless phone has the ability to store names and phone
numbers at their fingertips in an electronic phone book. Basic
models can store a few hundred names and numbers while phones geared
toward business users provide more complete contact management with
capacity for postal addresses, multiple phone numbers, email
addresses and even photo IDs for as many as 500 contacts. For many
GSM phones that feature SIM card operation, additional contacts can
be stored on directly on the SIM card itself, ready for transport to
new equipment if needed.

Personalization Options
Today wireless phones are more than just communication tools; they
are frequently fashion statements or expressions of personal style.
Many wireless phones offer interchangeable covers, a selection of
graphics or photos that can adorn the screen or a choice of
customizable ringtones-samples of music or other sounds to replace
the standard beeps, chirps or rings that tell you someone is
calling. Many phones allow users to assign specific rings to
individual callers whose names and numbers are stored in the phone's
directory. While these feature do not improve the sound quality or
reception of a wireless phone, they can be fun, inexpensive
expressions of style and personal creativity.

Text Messaging
The most common, non-phone function available on wireless phones is
the ability to send and receive short text messages to and from
other wireless phones. Sometimes called SMS ( Short Message
Service), this capability can be handy for sending short, discreet
messages to someone who's not free to take a phone call and is
unable to access their email. Typing messages on a phone's numeric
keypad can be time consuming, even with predictive text entry
(software that helps type your messages by guessing what words you
are trying to enter and completing them for you automatically).
Through agreements among the carriers and limited to about 150
characters, SMS messages can be sent to any wireless phone user,
regardless of which carrier they use. Several more advanced forms of
messaging permit embedded or attached graphics, digital photos,
music clips or other multi-media content. Known as EMS (Enhanced
Messaging Service) and MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service) only work
on specially equipped wireless phones and often only between
compatible phones from the same carrier.

Web Browser
Almost universally available in some form or another, Wireless Web
Browsing allows a customer to view and navigate through Web pages
specially formatted for viewing on small cell phone screens.
Wireless Web users should note that while the browser software is
typically included with a capable wireless phone, actual access to
the Web requires and extra-cost subscription from the carrier.

Digital Camera
The most popular feature on today's wireless phones is a integrated
Digital Camera. While not all are suitable for framing, these small
format photos can be reviewed on the phone's display or shared with
friends and family via email, the Web or by sending them to
similarly equipped phones. An increasing number of wireless phones
are coming equipped with 1+ megapixel cameras with advanced photo
editing features and a built-in flash. These advanced camera phones
are capable of taking and storing images that will print respectably
on 4x6 photo paper.
While they are certainly not
substitutes for conventional digital or film-based cameras for
capturing memorable moments, having a camera with you everywhere you
go can be both useful and fun. It doesn't cost anything to snap and
display photos on the phone's screen, but sending photos via email,
MMS or Web-based photo-sharing services typically requires a
subscription from the carrier and or a third-party service.
Customers should note that , airtime used transmitting or
transferring photos and other data may be charged against your
allowance of talk time.

Push-To-Talk Service (Direct Connect/Two-Way
Radio)
Push-To-Talk Service allows subscribers to instantly connect with
each other walkie-talkie style without dialing the 10-digit phone
number. Carrier plans that offer this feature usually provide a
separate allowance of minutes for the service in addition to the
allowance of Talk Time minutes in the calling plan. Nextel is the
most popular of the carriers to feature push-to-talk service,
featuring DirectConnect(tm) capability on every one of their iDEN
wireless phones. Verizon and Sprint also offer Push-To-Talk service,
though only on select wireless phones in their catalogs. Currently,
the Push-To-Talk features only work if both parties subscribe to the
service on the same Carrier network.

Additional Features
-
Speed Dialing or One-Touch Dialing
- Allows users to designate a number of stored contacts for
quick one- or two-button dialing of frequently called numbers.
-
Vibrating Alert - Allows user to set phone to
vibrate instead of ring, providing a silent alert for incoming
calls, especially appropriate for phone use in public places or
meetings where ringing would be inappropriate.
-
Speakerphone - Permits hands free use of your
phone during a call, especially useful when driving your car.
Some speakerphone models will also respond to voice menu
commands enabling users total hands-free operation of their
wireless phone in everyday situations.
-
Voice Dialing -
Enables user to speak a contact name or number in the phone's
address book and prompt the phone to dial the number
automatically without pressing buttons on the numeric keypad.
Coupled with speakerphone capability, this is another feature
that eases hands-free operation while driving.
-
Voice Recorder -
Records and plays back short spoken notes or personal memos.
-
Games - Enable wireless phone to provide an
entertaining diversion from airport layovers, tedious waiting in
line or other boring situations.
-
Downloadable Ringtones and Graphics - Permits
the user to add new ringtones, screen graphics and other data
that didn't come built into a phone by connecting to a carrier
or a third-party data service and "downloading" directly into
the phone's memory. Some phones are limited to downloading
ringtones and screen graphics, while others can add games and
other software programs, including productivity tools and
relatively sophisticated business applications.
-
Ring Tone Melody Composer - Software program
built into some phones that enables custom composition of
melodies that can be then be saved as user defined ringtones.
-
FM Radio or MP3 Player - Built-in radio tuner
or digital music player for fans of portable music, talk radio
or news broadcasts to listen to their favorite media through
their wireless phone or in stereo with an external adapter or
earbud headphones.
-
Instant Messenger - Popular user-to-user text
chatting service that enables silent two-way conversations with
another user or users using an Internet-connected computer or
cell phone.
-
Personal Information Management (PIM) or Personal Digital
Assistant (PDA) Functions - Varied collections
of simple organizational tools such as an alarm clock, calendar
and to-do list to more sophisticated capabilities that mimic
those of a full- handheld computer. Many inexpensive cell phones
and mid-priced models include the basic organizer functions, and
most can be synchronized with calendar and contact info
maintained on a PC. More sophisticated wireless phone/PDA
combinations with integrated microprocessors and advanced
software capabilities typically cost several hundred dollars.
-
Infrared Connection - Permits a direct
line-of-sight connection to another wireless phone, handheld or
laptop computer. Primarily for exchanging and synchronizing
phonebook or calendar data, an Infrared Connection can also be
used in wireless multiplayer gaming. Particularly useful feature
with PC-based contact management or calendar software that can
keep the same data stored and updated on a wireless phone.
-
Bluetooth Connection - Local radio based
direct wireless connection similar to Infrared, though with
increased range and transfer speed and not requiring
line-of-sight alignment. Allows links to other Bluetooth enabled
devices including phones, headsets, laptops, printers and other
devices. Also primarily for exchanging or synchronizing
phonebook or calendar data, a Bluetooth Connection is also
increasingly used in wireless multiplayer gaming.
-
Global Positioning System or GPS - Enables
carrier to use signals from GPS satellites to pinpoint the
geographic location of the device in the event of an emergency,
or increasingly for user-defined location based services.
