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After being dependent on others for cell phone coverage for several years now, I have finally decided that yes, it's time I got one of my own. However, since I've never owned one, I have no idea what to buy and would beg advice. Here are my criteria: 1. I am not ditching my landline. The four days we spent without power to charge a phone but with a working landline convinced me that no, I don't want to remove my safety net quite yet. 2. No contract and no monthly fees. I really don't have the money for another bill, and I seriously, seriously doubt I'd use a cell phone often to make it cost-effective. I assume this means I'd have to buy prepaid calling cards from time to time, but I've done that before and have no problem with it. 3. Small and portable. I don't need a smart phone and don't especially want one because they seem like colossal time and energy wasters. 4. Inexpensive. My budget for a basic phone is maybe $30, tops, since I will not be storing pictures, taking pictures, storing music, playing music, reading books or articles, checking e-mail, or otherwise using the phone for anything but calls and *maybe* the occasional text. Is this unrealistic, or is there something out there that will work? I've been holding out for years, especially after the European reports that why yes, there *is* a small correlation between cell phone use and acoustic neuroma, since the last thing I need is ANOTHER !#$!$@!$!@@! tumor. This is for emergency use only, nothing more. Thanks in advance....

Date: 2012-08-04 04:33 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] salsify.livejournal.com
Definitely possible. The one I have now costs around $20 in the big box stores. I've seen basic models in your price range from most cell phone companies.

My family hasn't had the best luck with TracFone--we had two different phones fail to activate and customer support was hard to use and couldn't solve the problem. We've had better luck with TMobile and Virgin Mobile, though I've noticed lately that very few stores are selling Virgin Mobile phones or cards.

The big problem for (formerly) sporadic users like me is that with a lot of pay-as-you-go phones, you have to add a certain number of minutes every few months to keep the phone activated. I ended up with a huge backlog of unused minutes, even after I canceled my landline long-distance. One big family crisis took care of that problem, though.

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