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Verizon Smartphones? (2 Viewers)

No unlimited data sucks. I'm on AT&T but my contract is up. Now I'm stuck deciding whether to stay with AT&T and my unlimited data but no 4G LTE available or switching to Verizon with 4G LTE but limited data. Increasing speeds and limiting data :hot:

I guess I'll wait and see what the Droid Razr HD looks like. At least that will give me some time to decide.

 
I've been keeping up with this thread and many others about all of the smart phones. I've been stuck in my Tmobile contract that will finally end in September/October when I should be able to choose from a bunch of phones. Been hoping my old Blackberry would make it these last three months, then my 2 year old drops it in the pool before my wife can catch her. :rant: If anyone has a functioning old Blackberry collecting dust...
I've got a Verizon one if the first guy falls through.
Go for it. I couldn't find her old one.
PM sent to Jester
Thanks, but I have to have a tmobile version I guess.
 
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So, if you were under contract with VZW and wanted to upgrade RIGHT NOW, which phone do you choose?

- Moto RAZR Maxx

- Samsung GSIII

- Moto Droid 4

- iPhone 4s

- Samsung Galaxy Nexus

- HTC Droid Incredible

 
I had the Galaxy S2 with Sprint and have the Nexus on Verizon now...if I were in the market I doubt I'd consider anything but the Galaxy S3.

 
depending on how much the upgrade price is for the S3, I'd go with the GNex if its significantly cheaper. No quad core for the S3 means not getting much of an upgrade besides the extra GB of RAM imo, unless you care about the camera and gorilla glass that much. Def if you're getting a new contract with VZ the best value is the GNex for free.

 
So, if you were under contract with VZW and wanted to upgrade RIGHT NOW, which phone do you choose?- Moto RAZR Maxx- Samsung GSIII- Moto Droid 4- iPhone 4s- Samsung Galaxy Nexus- HTC Droid Incredible
Probably can't go wrong with any but i'm amaxx user, so that has my vote
 
So, if you were under contract with VZW and wanted to upgrade RIGHT NOW, which phone do you choose?- Moto RAZR Maxx- Samsung GSIII- Moto Droid 4- iPhone 4s- Samsung Galaxy Nexus- HTC Droid Incredible
Probably can't go wrong with any but i'm amaxx user, so that has my vote
Yeah. The new Galaxy appears to be the next great thing, so I'll probably go with it. $200 I think. The RAZR Maxx is right there, too.
 
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I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.

 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.

 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
It's included after 6/28. As of today it's and add on that they charge for.
 
Also, what is unlimited data? If I am just going to use my phone for calls, texts and web browsing, do I really need unlimited data?
This is the part that grinds my gears.The answer is no, you don't. Not right now. But the whole point of marketing the next greatest line of phones as "4G" is that you'll be able to download quickly. You don't need quick downloads to access the NYTimes or the WSJ or your fantasy team or the FFA. You need quick downloads to stream a show off of Hulu while you're out somewhere. But once you start doing that, then you do need more data. So people switch over thinking, "Well, this isn't that bad" only to find out a couple of years in, oh hey, yes it is.

 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
It was from this article but this appears changedhttp://finance.yahoo.com/news/a-cheat-sheet-for-verizon%E2%80%99s-new-shared-data-plans.html

 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
Droid Life us always on target. They're very reliable.
 
Good q&a herehttp://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/story/2012-06-12/verizon-questions-answers-data/55553166/1

Q: Will Verizon convert me to a new plan, or can I keep my old plan?A: Verizon won't switch you over to the new plan unless you ask. You can keep your old plan, even if you trade up to a new phone after that date and extend your contract. But for new customers, Share Everything will be the only alternative, with a few exceptions, starting June 28.Q: What type of customer should move to the new plan?A: If you already have unlimited calling and texting plans, the new plans are likely to save you money, especially if you have a family plan. If you have a tablet, the new pricing scheme could be a good idea too. Even if your tablet doesn't have a cellular modem, you may be able to take advantage of the plan, because it lets you create a "mobile hotspot" with your smartphone, so you can go online with your Wi-Fi-only tablet. MORE: Verizon Wireless overhauls service plans with new optionsQ: What if I have an "unlimited data" plan? Can I keep it?A: Yes, you can. But —and there's a big "but" here— Verizon will no longer let you move the plan to a new phone after June 28, unless you pay the full, unsubsidized price for it. For most smartphones that will add hundreds of dollars to the price. A subsidized Verizon iPhone 4S costs $200. The price you'll pay if you keep your unlimited plan: $650. (Verizon stopped signing up new customer for unlimited a year ago)Q: I'm a current Verizon customer with a 3G phone, but I need faster data downloads. Do I have to go to a new plan if I upgrade to a 4G phone?A: No, you can keep your old plan. However, if you have an unlimited data plan, you'll be paying full price for that spiffy new 4G phone, as mentioned above.Q: I have a phone and tablet, but they're on different carriers. Can this plan work for me?A: Probably not. The plan encourages you to use only Verizon-compatible devices. But if you have a Verizon smartphone and an AT&T iPad, you could cancel the AT&T service and use the hotspot mode mentioned above. It's just not as convenient has having direct cellular access on the iPad.Q: I don't need a fancy data plan. I just want a regular phone, with no frills. Are the calling-only plans going away?A: Almost. There will be only one plan for basic phones. It costs $40 per month and gives you 700 minutes of calling. Texting and data will cost extra. For this type of phone, there are cheaper, no-contract alternatives from many companies.Q: I'm single and I just want a smartphone, that's it. The cheapest Shared Everything plan looks pretty expensive at $90 per month, and that's with just 1 gigabyte of data. Is there no alternative?A: There's one cheaper plan, intended for first-time smartphone buyers. It gives you unlimited calling and texting, and just 300 megabytes of data per month. If you're frugal with data usage, that will get you by. It costs $80 per month.Q: Is this the future? Are all phone plans going to be this way?A: For its part, AT&T is likely to go in this direction as well. It makes sense for phone companies to meter only the data usage. They can easily provide unlimited texting and calling, but data usage stresses their network. They also want to get as many new, non-phone devices as possible on their networks, and, for customers, shared data plans are cheaper than putting each device on a new plan.That said, there's likely to be a wide variety of phone plans in the industry.Q: How do data plans work in other countries?A: They mostly limit data usage per device, the model Verizon is moving away from. Contract terms are often more flexible overseas, however, and more phones and Internet devices are pay-as-you-go rather than bound by contract.Q: Does this mean I can drop my home DSL service or cable modem?A: Maybe, if you're a light Internet user. Adding a data stick or Verizon-connected "hotspot" device to your plan will cost just $20 per month. But home PCs often use a lot of data, especially if you like to watch Internet video. Many households use more than 10 gigabytes per month, the maximum allotment under Verizon's plan. That much data costs $100 per month.
 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
It's included after 6/28. As of today it's and add on that they charge for.
From the article below, there is a charge for tablets...I'm guessing this is the charge to have your tablet use the data plan...but if you connect it through your phone hotspot, you don't have to pay the $10/month fee?http://techland.time.com/2012/06/13/verizon-share-everything-plans/?iid=ent-main-mostpop2

Starting June 28, subscribers can pay a flat fee for each device they connect–$40 for smartphones, $20 for portable hotspots or notebooks, $10 for tablets and $30 for basic phones–plus a single charge for shared monthly data, ranging from $50 for 1 GB to $100 for 10 GB. All phones on the Share Everything plan will have unlimited voice minutes and text messages, and smartphones will be able to serve as Wi-Fi hotspots for other devices at no extra charge.
This is terrible for our family plan. We have 8 phones (2 smart phones, using about 3-4 total GB per month and 6 regular phones).We currently pay around $225 per month for basically unlimited minutes, a few texting plans, and unlimited data on the two smart phones.

Under the new plan, we would pay 6 x $30 for the regular phones, 2 x $40 for the two smart phones, and another $70 for data access. Voice minutes, texting and hotspot would be included.

That's an increase from $225 to $330...oh yeah, and a GB cap placed on our data. :rant:

Looks like the entire family will be upgrading our phones and holding out indefinitely after that.

 
Well that sucks. My wife is still under contract for a long while with AT&T. I was planning on switching to Verizon myself and it would have been around $80 for a plan with 4gb of data. Now I'll have to pay $90 for 1gb of data because it's "shared" even though I'm the only one using it?

F that.

 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then theres tethering the ability to share your smartphones 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although its still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
Droid Life us always on target. They're very reliable.
That wired.com article is from 2011. I believe if you want to hook a tablet up directly, it will be $10/month. If you use your phone as a mobile hotspot, it will be no charge, but the data used will count against your cap.

Using the phone as a mobile hotspot is less convenient, so its up to you to decide if its worth the extra $10 a month to have your tablet directly connected.

At least, that's the way I'm reading it..I may very well be wrong.

 
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Well that sucks. My wife is still under contract for a long while with AT&T. I was planning on switching to Verizon myself and it would have been around $80 for a plan with 4gb of data. Now I'll have to pay $90 for 1gb of data because it's "shared" even though I'm the only one using it?F that.
I thought I read somewhere that you can pay $40? for 700 minutes and add 2gb of data for $30/month.
 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
Droid Life us always on target. They're very reliable.
That wired.com article is from 2011. I believe if you want to hook a tablet up directly, it will be $10/month. If you use your phone as a mobile hotspot, it will be no charge, but the data used will count against your cap.

Using the phone as a mobile hotspot is less convenient, so its up to you to decide if its worth the extra $10 a month to have it directly connected.

At least, that's the way I'm reading it..I may very well be wrong.
No I think this is right. I think the article he posted was when they got rid of unlimited plans.
 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
Droid Life us always on target. They're very reliable.
That wired.com article is from 2011. I believe if you want to hook a tablet up directly, it will be $10/month. If you use your phone as a mobile hotspot, it will be no charge, but the data used will count against your cap.

Using the phone as a mobile hotspot is less convenient, so its up to you to decide if its worth the extra $10 a month to have your tablet directly connected.

At least, that's the way I'm reading it..I may very well be wrong.
same way I'm reading it, but the bolded above will be true regardless of whether you connect your tablet directly at $10/month or use your phone's mobile hotspot.
 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
Droid Life us always on target. They're very reliable.
That wired.com article is from 2011. I believe if you want to hook a tablet up directly, it will be $10/month. If you use your phone as a mobile hotspot, it will be no charge, but the data used will count against your cap.

Using the phone as a mobile hotspot is less convenient, so its up to you to decide if its worth the extra $10 a month to have your tablet directly connected.

At least, that's the way I'm reading it..I may very well be wrong.
same way I'm reading it, but the bolded above will be true regardless of whether you connect your tablet directly at $10/month or use your phone's mobile hotspot.
Also depends on your tablet. Is it 3G,4G or is it WiFi only.
 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
Droid Life us always on target. They're very reliable.
That wired.com article is from 2011. I believe if you want to hook a tablet up directly, it will be $10/month. If you use your phone as a mobile hotspot, it will be no charge, but the data used will count against your cap.

Using the phone as a mobile hotspot is less convenient, so its up to you to decide if its worth the extra $10 a month to have your tablet directly connected.

At least, that's the way I'm reading it..I may very well be wrong.
Directly from Verizon:http://solutions.vzwshop.com/shareeverything/pdf/verizon_share_everything_plan_details.pdf

$10/month charge for using mobile hotspot on tablets. See page 2.

Talk about hidden charges...they say it doesn't cost anything to use Mobile Hotspot...but there's a $10 charge to use your tablet on the mobile hotspot

 
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
Droid Life us always on target. They're very reliable.
That wired.com article is from 2011. I believe if you want to hook a tablet up directly, it will be $10/month. If you use your phone as a mobile hotspot, it will be no charge, but the data used will count against your cap.

Using the phone as a mobile hotspot is less convenient, so its up to you to decide if its worth the extra $10 a month to have your tablet directly connected.

At least, that's the way I'm reading it..I may very well be wrong.
Directly from Verizon:http://solutions.vzwshop.com/shareeverything/pdf/verizon_share_everything_plan_details.pdf

$10/month charge for using mobile hotspot on tablets. See page 2.

Talk about hidden charges...they say it doesn't cost anything to use Mobile Hotspot...but there's a $10 charge to use your tablet on the mobile hotspot
Are you looking at the data only $10 that includes mobile hotspot?Here’s what you get with your

Share Everything Plan:

• Unlimited Talk for all devices on

your account. No more worries about

overage charges.

• Unlimited Text1 for all devices on your

account. Send as many text, picture and

video messages as you want.

• Shareable Data for all the devices on your

account. Select how much you’ll need, and

then share it with up to 10 devices.

Mobile Hotspot2 is included on all capable

devices. Connect your device and share

your data allowance with multiple Wi-Fi–

enabled devices.

Eta: the way I read itis, it is 10 to add a tablet to use on the network. You can use that tablet as a hotspot to connect other wifi devices :shrug:

 
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'belljr said:
'Warrior said:
'Skipdog77 said:
'flapgreen said:
'Warrior said:
'belljr said:
'Warrior said:
I'm probably going to upgrade soon so I'll get to keep my unlimited data until I'm done with my next phone. Is the free mobile hotspot only for those who upgrade after 6/28, or would I benefit from that as well when the change happens?

Looks like it's time to part ways with my Droid X.
I think it's only if you switch plans..
Everything I'm reading is saying there's a charge for using your phone like a hotspot for tablets, etc. Where are you guys hearing it will be free?For example:

And then there’s tethering – the ability to share your smartphone’s 3G or 4G internet connection with another device, such as a computer. If you want to add tethering capability to your phone, prepare to shell out even more dough. AT&T charges you an extra $20 a month to enable tethering on your smartphone. Verizon may give you a better deal, although it’s still not cheap: According to Droid Life, an extra $20 a month to Verizon will get you tethering capability, as well as tack on an additional 2 GB of data to your monthly limit. Not a bad way to outdo AT&T.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/06/verizon-unlimited-data/I'm seeing similar charges reported on other sites as well.
Droid Life us always on target. They're very reliable.
That wired.com article is from 2011. I believe if you want to hook a tablet up directly, it will be $10/month. If you use your phone as a mobile hotspot, it will be no charge, but the data used will count against your cap.

Using the phone as a mobile hotspot is less convenient, so its up to you to decide if its worth the extra $10 a month to have your tablet directly connected.

At least, that's the way I'm reading it..I may very well be wrong.
Directly from Verizon:http://solutions.vzwshop.com/shareeverything/pdf/verizon_share_everything_plan_details.pdf

$10/month charge for using mobile hotspot on tablets. See page 2.

Talk about hidden charges...they say it doesn't cost anything to use Mobile Hotspot...but there's a $10 charge to use your tablet on the mobile hotspot
Are you looking at the data only $10 that includes mobile hotspot?Here’s what you get with your

Share Everything Plan:

• Unlimited Talk for all devices on

your account. No more worries about

overage charges.

• Unlimited Text1 for all devices on your

account. Send as many text, picture and

video messages as you want.

• Shareable Data for all the devices on your

account. Select how much you’ll need, and

then share it with up to 10 devices.

Mobile Hotspot2 is included on all capable

devices. Connect your device and share

your data allowance with multiple Wi-Fi–

enabled devices.

Eta: the way I read itis, it is 10 to add a tablet to use on the network. You can use that tablet as a hotspot to connect other wifi devices :shrug:
Hmm...I think I see what you're saying. If you have a plan with no phones, that is only used by Tablets, then you pay $10/month which includes mobile hotspot. Then you pay $30-$60/month in addition for the data.However, if you have a plan with phones, you're paying $50-$100/month in addition for the data, but Hotspot is included for free...though it takes away from your data limit.

So I was wrong. Mobile Hotspot is included with phone plans...the $10/month charge is if you have a tablet-only plan.

Unfortunately, that free Hotspot comes with $1,200+ in additional charges per year tacked onto our current plan :angry:

 
So the wife and I are on a shared family play. I have unlimited data. She gets 2gig/month. I've been upgrade-eligible for a few years.

So if I upgrade now, I can get a new phone at the renewal price and keep my unlimited.

If I wait to upgrade, I'll have either have to pay full freight on it or..... what?

I think we can still keep our current plan which looks like it would be a better deal for us than what Verizon is now pushing. I just would have to transition to fixed data. And that would be 2gig(?) like she has? I don't think we'd have to switch plans.

That sounds right?

Or I could just take the upgrade, take whatever has the highest street value, and sell the phone on craigslist until I see what the iPhone5 looks like.

 
So the wife and I are on a shared family play. I have unlimited data. She gets 2gig/month. I've been upgrade-eligible for a few years.

So if I upgrade now, I can get a new phone at the renewal price and keep my unlimited.

If I wait to upgrade, I'll have either have to pay full freight on it or..... what?

I think we can still keep our current plan which looks like it would be a better deal for us than what Verizon is now pushing. I just would have to transition to fixed data. And that would be 2gig(?) like she has? I don't think we'd have to switch plans.

That sounds right?

Or I could just take the upgrade, take whatever has the highest street value, and sell the phone on craigslist until I see what the iPhone5 looks like.
Unless you use a lot of minutes, it looks like the shared plan will not be better than the current plan, especially if you factor in unlimited data for 1 or more lines. If I were you, I'd use my upgrade now. Sell it if you don't want it, and use the money to buy an iPhone5 at full retail if you prefer it.I can't find it now, but I think if you use an upgrade after June 28th, you can transition to a 2gb for $30 plan (just like she has now), but why give up unlimited data?

 
Preordered the S3 in order to keep my unlimited data. It's going to be interesting in a couple years when I have to face losing unlimited data or a discounted phone.

 
This new data scheme really sucks. It's tempting to buy a new smartphone before the switch but that just seems like another waste of money. Still running with the original Droid.

 
So the wife and I are on a shared family play. I have unlimited data. She gets 2gig/month. I've been upgrade-eligible for a few years.

So if I upgrade now, I can get a new phone at the renewal price and keep my unlimited.

If I wait to upgrade, I'll have either have to pay full freight on it or..... what?

I think we can still keep our current plan which looks like it would be a better deal for us than what Verizon is now pushing. I just would have to transition to fixed data. And that would be 2gig(?) like she has? I don't think we'd have to switch plans.

That sounds right?

Or I could just take the upgrade, take whatever has the highest street value, and sell the phone on craigslist until I see what the iPhone5 looks like.
If you upgrade before the end of the month (including pre-ordering the galaxy S3) you can keep your unlimited data and get the new phone at the discounted rate.After June 28th if you want to upgrade at the discounted rate for a new phone, you lose your unlimited data and go tiered pricing. Or you can keep your unlimited data but have to pay full price for any new phones you get.

 
This new data scheme really sucks. It's tempting to buy a new smartphone before the switch but that just seems like another waste of money. Still running with the original Droid.
The difference between 3G and 4G is pretty significant from what i can see comparing my Droid X to my wife's Razr. If I were you and still rocking the old school Droid I'd upgrade now while I can get a 4G phone at a reduced price and keep my unlimited data.
 
This new data scheme really sucks. It's tempting to buy a new smartphone before the switch but that just seems like another waste of money. Still running with the original Droid.
Isn't the Galaxy Nexus free?
I see it on the website at 200
See if you qualify here: http://wireless.amazon.com/Samsung-Galaxy-Nexus-Android-Wireless/dp/B0061R2A1SNot sure if that's only for new lines, or can be used for new 2 year agreements too.

ETA - looks like it's $150 for an upgrade. Probably worth it to go to the SIII for $200.

 
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Unless you use a lot of minutes, it looks like the shared plan will not be better than the current plan, especially if you factor in unlimited data for 1 or more lines. If I were you, I'd use my upgrade now. Sell it if you don't want it, and use the money to buy an iPhone5 at full retail if you prefer it.

I can't find it now, but I think if you use an upgrade after June 28th, you can transition to a 2gb for $30 plan (just like she has now), but why give up unlimited data?
Yah, I think this is what I'm going to do. And then just wait and see in 2 years if keeping the unlimited data is worth more or less than $20/month which is about what the upgrade discount works out to be.
 
Unless you use a lot of minutes, it looks like the shared plan will not be better than the current plan, especially if you factor in unlimited data for 1 or more lines. If I were you, I'd use my upgrade now. Sell it if you don't want it, and use the money to buy an iPhone5 at full retail if you prefer it.

I can't find it now, but I think if you use an upgrade after June 28th, you can transition to a 2gb for $30 plan (just like she has now), but why give up unlimited data?
Yah, I think this is what I'm going to do. And then just wait and see in 2 years if keeping the unlimited data is worth more or less than $20/month which is about what the upgrade discount works out to be.
:confused: Are you saying if you buy an unsubsidized phone?
 
This new data scheme really sucks. It's tempting to buy a new smartphone before the switch but that just seems like another waste of money. Still running with the original Droid.
I'm in a similar boat, except that my wife has a BB Curve something or other. She uses BB because her family in S. America all have BBs and they use BBM to chat, plus she travels internationally all the time and need the GSM quad band capabilities. So she doesn't want to upgrade her phone and move away from the BB. I'm still using the O.G. Droid and have been wanting to upgrade for a while. We have unlimited data right now, and use close to 2GB/month combined.We decided to stick with the status quo until one of us has a need to upgrade. If I were the only one on the plan, I'd upgrade now, but my wife's upgrade cycle is like 6 months behind mine. We'll have to suck it up in like 6-10 months and get the capped data plan, I'm sure. But until then, we'll stick with the status quo. That is unless someone can convince me to flip an iPhone or something...
 
Unless you use a lot of minutes, it looks like the shared plan will not be better than the current plan, especially if you factor in unlimited data for 1 or more lines. If I were you, I'd use my upgrade now. Sell it if you don't want it, and use the money to buy an iPhone5 at full retail if you prefer it.

I can't find it now, but I think if you use an upgrade after June 28th, you can transition to a 2gb for $30 plan (just like she has now), but why give up unlimited data?
Yah, I think this is what I'm going to do. And then just wait and see in 2 years if keeping the unlimited data is worth more or less than $20/month which is about what the upgrade discount works out to be.
:confused: Are you saying if you buy an unsubsidized phone?
Yes.Full retail on the top-end phones are about $600. The subsidized price is about $200. So amortizing the subsidy over the 2-year period you get about $20/month. The question is what's more valuable: the phone purchase subsidy or unlimited data? Right now I'd say it's the phone subsidy but if download speeds and content continue to trend towards the data-heavy, I think that result flips.

 
Unless you use a lot of minutes, it looks like the shared plan will not be better than the current plan, especially if you factor in unlimited data for 1 or more lines. If I were you, I'd use my upgrade now. Sell it if you don't want it, and use the money to buy an iPhone5 at full retail if you prefer it.

I can't find it now, but I think if you use an upgrade after June 28th, you can transition to a 2gb for $30 plan (just like she has now), but why give up unlimited data?
Yah, I think this is what I'm going to do. And then just wait and see in 2 years if keeping the unlimited data is worth more or less than $20/month which is about what the upgrade discount works out to be.
:confused: Are you saying if you buy an unsubsidized phone?
Yes.Full retail on the top-end phones are about $600. The subsidized price is about $200. So amortizing the subsidy over the 2-year period you get about $20/month. The question is what's more valuable: the phone purchase subsidy or unlimited data? Right now I'd say it's the phone subsidy but if download speeds and content continue to trend towards the data-heavy, I think that result flips.
I wasn't being snakry I was really unsure. I agree. They make you change then all of a sudden you find out your 5gb isn't getting you what you used to get
 
I wasn't being snakry I was really unsure. I agree. They make you change then all of a sudden you find out your 5gb isn't getting you what you used to get
I didn't think you were. So I was just laid it out in more detail.
 
SGS3 demoing videos for Sprint employees.

In case you’re particularly interested in purchasing the device from Sprint, then you’ll be happy to hear that no less than 15 Galaxy S3 training videos for Sprint employees have been leaked, each one demoing certain features of the handset.The videos, posted by Inside Sprint Now, are very short (45 to 80 seconds) but they each show you an interesting Galaxy S3 function including All Share, Dropbox, Group Cast, lock screen, S Beam, S Voice, picture sharing, Smart Gestures, Samsung TecTiles, and camera features.Of the available videos, we’ll notice two of them, the ones that are detailing Smart Gestures and Samsung TecTiles. With Smart Gestures, users will be able to initiate certain Galaxy S3 actions on the handset by simply taking advantage of the gesture features the device supports. These gestures include Direct Call, Smart Alert, Shake to Update and can be customized in the phone’s settings app, which is also where you can get more details about the available gestures.
http://www.androidauthority.com/sprint-galaxy-s3-staff-training-video-leaked-94612/
 
This new data scheme really sucks. It's tempting to buy a new smartphone before the switch but that just seems like another waste of money. Still running with the original Droid.
The difference between 3G and 4G is pretty significant from what i can see comparing my Droid X to my wife's Razr. If I were you and still rocking the old school Droid I'd upgrade now while I can get a 4G phone at a reduced price and keep my unlimited data.
Similar situation - I've been running with the Droid X since it came out and am due for an upgrade as is the wife with her Droid 2. We both have unlimited data but haven't been heavy users at this point. Based in part on this thread, I'm looking at the Razr Max or the new S3. Benefit of staying with Motorola is that we can use the same accessories (for the most part) and you can see what you're getting. The new features on the S3 sound appealing but I'm a little on the fence - anyone have a compelling argument for one over the other? Thanks.
 
same here. I am scared of a Samsung. Had an Omnia (windows) & it was a piece of crap. My Droid X is the best phone I have ever had. Want the newest & quadcor procesor & have to upgrade by the 28th to keep unlimited data. All S3 input appreciated!

 
same here. I am scared of a Samsung. Had an Omnia (windows) & it was a piece of crap. My Droid X is the best phone I have ever had. Want the newest & quadcor procesor & have to upgrade by the 28th to keep unlimited data. All S3 input appreciated!
Only the Global version of the S3 is quad core. The American version is dual core.
 
I preordered the S3 and for some reason Verizon gave me an extra $150 off. I ended up paying ~$83 for it.

 
This new data scheme really sucks. It's tempting to buy a new smartphone before the switch but that just seems like another waste of money. Still running with the original Droid.
The difference between 3G and 4G is pretty significant from what i can see comparing my Droid X to my wife's Razr. If I were you and still rocking the old school Droid I'd upgrade now while I can get a 4G phone at a reduced price and keep my unlimited data.
Similar situation - I've been running with the Droid X since it came out and am due for an upgrade as is the wife with her Droid 2. We both have unlimited data but haven't been heavy users at this point. Based in part on this thread, I'm looking at the Razr Max or the new S3. Benefit of staying with Motorola is that we can use the same accessories (for the most part) and you can see what you're getting. The new features on the S3 sound appealing but I'm a little on the fence - anyone have a compelling argument for one over the other? Thanks.
Sofa...I went from the Original Droid X to the Razr Maxx and love it. I use an Otterbox Defender series and also got the LG bluetooth headphones which come in really handy when running or biking. I also like the MotoCast feature, which pulls all my music and photos from my computer into the clouds, which saves space on my SD card and gives me options to see and view everything. I have also yet to entirely drain the battery in 1 days use.
 
Thanks Matthias. Hmm, S3 or RazorMaxx?
I would go with the S3. Better specs, better screen, better OS (right now) the only thing the Maxx has over the S3 is the battery and if that is a major concern for you I'm sure the S3 will have a bigger battery option. That being said ICS is much better with battery management.
 

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