By: Nancy Cap on Thursday, June 19, 2008 From: Ashburnham, MA (United States) Experience: 6 Months
Cons: No one speaks good English, no one caresSummary: I bought my son an $80 phone which came with double minutes for life. When I activated it I asked "if he loses the phone what do I do?" and they told me "just go to your local reatailer & purchase another tracfone and we can transfer everything over". He did lose it one time and I had to deactivate the service for a few days and I asked again what I should do if we never find it and was told the exact same thing. Well he lost his phone again and I purchased another cheap tracfone & when I went to activate it was told that they would tranfer the phone number over, but I no longer had "double minutes for life" because the phone was lost. After speaking to a useless supervisor who spoke no better english then the customer service rep and could care less about my lost phone I decided to cut my losses & return my cheap phone. I had already spent $80 on the phone and $25 on the minutes card. The customer support is terrible, you can barely understand them, becuase it is loud and they barely speak english. I spent more time asking them to repeat themselves becuase I had NO IDEA what they were saying. I would NEVER buy another tracfone. I have had Virgin Mobile in the past and their customer service was great, they spoke English & were friendly & helpful. If you see tracfones in the store, even if the phone is cheap and the deal sounds too good to be true, keep walking, its not worth it.
By: pauline watts on Saturday, June 14, 2008 From: bluffton, OH (United States) Experience: 30 Days
Pros: No ContractCons: Everything except no contract. Took over 7 hours and 34 telephone conversations to get it right!Summary: Tracfone contracts to various carriers to provide cellular service. When I purchased the phone for my parents I explained that Tracfone should not assign AT&T as the carrier because that carrier does not work in my area even if the computer shows that it does. The type phone purchased was a Motorola. Got the phone, they assigned AT&T and it didn’t work. They said it must be a defective phone because their computer shows that the carrier works in my area. (It’s important to note that my parents and I have the same zip code and live two miles apart.) They sent a second phone. Same brand, same carrier, same problem. After talking for hours to technicians with thick accents using my Verizon cell phone minutes I decided to take the next step and call the corporate headquarters in Miami.
I called Miami corporate headquarters and got a person who said that the Motorola phone purchased had old technology and that what was needed in this area was an updated digital phone so they sent me an LG with different capabilities. I insisted that they assign Verizon as the carrier since AT&T does not work in this locality. I got the phone and tested it before I gave it to my parents. I set up the voice mail and thought the problems were behind us. Everything was working fine.
A few days later I called my mother's Tracfone and the call went directly into her voice mail so I left a message. I called back later on their landline and made certain she had the phone turned on, which she did. I told her I would call her back on the Tracfone to test it out because something doesn't seem to be working correctly and to my surprise the phone was answered but it wasn’t my mother. It was a woman who was in a boat in the middle of a lake. She said she had a problem with the number Tracfone had assigned to her and so they gave her a new number which was my parent’s number. This disabled my parents new Tracfone! Once again I called Miami corporate headquarters. They deactivated the number of the “woman in the boat” and reactivated my parent’s phone. Problem solved? No! Now I could call in but they still could not call out. I called Miami headquarters back. They said this was very unusual and that there must have been a computer glitch. The technician went into the computer system and corrected the problem. Finally we have an operable phone!
I have documented 34 telephone conversations with Tracfone technicians, many of whom have such a thick accent I found it difficult to communicate. I’ve also spent a total of 430 airtime minutes from my own Verizon personal cell phone getting this resolved. So the bottom line is we now have a Tracfone that works but is it worth spending over seven hours talking with technicians to get these problems solved? You decide!
By: Phoenix Light on Friday, May 30, 2008 From: McDonough, GA (United States) Experience: 5 Months
Pros: It's cheap.Cons: Everything except the price.Summary: Initially, there was no problem. I registered and activated the phone with no problem. I generally use my home and work landlines. The cellphone is just for job hunting and emergencies. I have no idea when the tracfone stopped working, but I got a call from a headhunter one day. At the end of our job screening, he mentioned that my cellphone was not in service. Oh, I thought, it probably needs charging. No, he said, try calling it. It says the number is not in service. Sure, enough, that's what I got when I tried calling it. So, I went online to see what was up. I bought a 1-year card when I bought the plan. The phone showed that I still have 893 unused minutes. My account status online was INACTIVE. I tried to reactivate and it told me I needed to call customer support.
That's when things really went wrong. Customer service is in India. I can deal with that. I've lived with Indians. I can understand the accent. Unfortunately, this person really couldn't speak English. Beyond that, the person appeared to be a total moron. The call took an hour. She kept asking me the sam questions over and over and over again. She couldn't keep straight the serial number from the SIM number. I am not kidding--I had to read out those long numbers at least 12 different times. Forget about trying to get any explanation for what went wrong. All I got was that the SIM number was no good. It's the number on the SIM card, it's the number on the labels and booklet that came with the phone, and it's the number the cellphone display shows. It worked just fine when I first bought it a couple of months ago. So, they'll ship me a new SIM card, which could take 7 days. (That's assuming she got the phone, name and address correct, which I doubt. I had to keep giving her those over and over again too.) She had no answers. It was clear that everything she said was being read off a script card, and she kept stumbling over the words like it was the first time she had ever seen them and had no idea what they meant.
I bought the phone in early January and this is the end of May. Anyone care to offer an opinion about Tracfone extending my service to cover this whole period of time that I thought I had an active cellphone but really didn't? I'm just grateful I never had my car breakdown and hope I haven't missed any job opportunities.
By: laurie sargent on Monday, May 19, 2008 From: ogdensburg, NY (United States) Experience: 5 Years
Pros: noneCons: shady business practices, rip offSummary: have had tracfone for at least 5 years. recently had "no service" display on my phone. had bought double minutes for this phone and had 600+ minutes and service time for months when the "no service" message displayed. they told me a new phone was being sent and the old phone needed to be updated and that they would give me 30 minutes for my troubles. phone had worked fine. took their word discarded old phone. sent me the same phone and suddenly the "double minutes" contract that i paid lots for was not transferred to the new phone. they asked dumb ?'s like "when did you purchase the double minutes", "what's the IMEI of the old phone", i think they send out new phones to replace old ones that worked perfectly. then u lose all the benefits u have paid an arm and leg for. customer service has changed completely. difficult to understand any of the service reps. they keep you on hold forever. have spent hours dealing with them. i wish we could bring a class action against them.
By: Shirley Coutts on Wednesday, April 09, 2008 From: Gettysburg, PA (United States) Experience: 2 Years
Pros: TracFone was good for awhile, but try to add minutes to your phone. I've been told twice to buy another TracFone. I have purchased two phones and I refuse to buy another. TracFone should have merchandise that will outlast others, if they are so good.Cons: I was on the phone for two hours to add minutes to my phone, after taking my credit card number and being transfered 4 different times. I was told once again that I needed to buy a new phone. I was also charged for the minutes which I did not receive, because my Service was disabled. I need a new phone again, I don't think so. TRASH!!Summary: I refuse to purchase another TracFone everytime I need minutes. TracFone need to stand up for the company and satisfy customers. False Advertising... Better Business Bureau will hear from me.
By: Kathy Brown on Thursday, March 27, 2008 From: Silver Spring, MD (United States) Experience: 30 Days
Summary: I have nothing but good things to say about Tracfone. I wanted to use my old cell phone number on my new tracfone. Customer service was a little hard to understand because of their accent, but they were terrific. It only took two days and everything went smoothly. Reception on tracfone is great. I have NO complaints.
By: rae parker on Saturday, March 08, 2008 From: cumberland, MD (United States) Experience: 10 Years
Pros: Low priceCons: Everything elseSummary: While they offer cheaply priced phones and phone cards, they are a horrible company lately. I was a Tracfone customer for roughly 10 years and just recently quit using their service. My parents are current customers of Tracfone and had to have replacement phones sent to them because of technology changes. It took Tracfone 2 months to send the phone, and another 2 months to send the correct sim card for the phone! The worse part though is that I ordered a new phone to replace the older one I had, and when I called to have everything transferred to the new phone, they messed up. They transfered the humber, but they lost all 830 minutes I had and they wouldn't give them back because there was no proof. I told them i was returning the phone I had just received and that I was done with their company. I am now a proud U.S. Cellular customer, waiting for Tracfone to refund the money for the price of the phone, I just wonder if they will or not. I would not, and will not recommend this company to anyone at all under any circumstance.
By: Garland McFarland on Monday, March 03, 2008 From: Las Vegas, NV (United States) Experience: 5 Years
Pros: Low-cost basic service, no contract, no hidden fees, no startup fees, connection fees, etc., remaining minutes displayed on phoneCons: Website is not user-friendly, customer service not consistentSummary: The website is not user-friendly. If you can't make it through all the screens, you have to call customer service. With luck, you will get a normal human being. If not, you get someone who barely functions on a human level. The wait time can be 30 minutes.----
It's a long complicated procedure to get your service set up and renewed. Getting voice mail set up was unbelievably complicated. You pay to retrieve your messages, by the way.-------
If you buy the one-year service, your contact with customer service is kept to a minimum. That I know of, there is no lower-cost way of having cell phone service.
Cost-per-minute is not the best comparison. There are lower cost per minute services, but those are standard phone contracts with all their fees, gimmicks, etc. This is service for people who need to make a call now and then, not for followers of gadget fads.
By: larry brown on Sunday, February 24, 2008 From: jamaica, NY (United States) Experience: 5 Years
Pros: no contracts, you track your minutes on your phone, excelent coverage state to state. Your phone is purchased with the minutes included.Cons: cannot get email, play music, take pictures, download ringtones from other providers. Will not allow you to transfer your number from one phone to another?Summary: Tracfone offers an affordable phone service for everyone who does not need all the cons I listed.
One tip to save even more money is use the text messaging option. cost for outgoing messages is 0.3 and incoming is 0.0.
If you want phone service without strings tracfone is the way to go.
By: Kody Green on Tuesday, February 19, 2008 From: Sherman , NY (United States) Experience: 5 Months
Pros: Good for people who use less than 500 minutes per month.Cons: Double Minute Plan with this time would bring more addressability for the card. Should they sell in Wal-Mart. But, have to get on-line Summary: Tracfone's 450 Minute card should be sold in Wal-Mart because of many Postpaid contract phones want you to spend 500 minutes or $59.99 per month to have a phone. Think thats bad, Sprint wants you to buy at least 450 minutes a month to get a lower price of the phone. If you want a contract with Sprint and want less than 450 minutes per month you have to pay at full MRSP (manufactures Retial Sales Price) for the phone and the phones in my area are at least $250.00 if not more. If you have the double minute plan with the 450 minute card the per minutes rate with out the cost of the double minute plan and sales tax is 0.0897 cents per minute.
Fierce! It's the unique new LG Lotus for Sprint - a square-shaped clamshell with a full QWERTY board inside. GPS, Sprint TV & Music, 2MP Camera, HTML Browser, Mobile IM and Email ... Noah checks out this fashion-forward feature phone.
Hey, look what just came! Thanks, Vanessa ;-) Here are some photos of the black LG Lotus for Sprint. The QWERTY board feels GREAT so far, as those bubbled chiclet-style keys make up for the relatively small size of the layout. Sprint's new One Click UI is sort of cool and helpful and sort of overdone; I'll have to play with it more, but I hope it winds up being handier more often than it gets in the way. And I'm...
It's the ruggedized Samsung a837 "Rugby" for AT&T. It's the Crane of Death in downtown Berkeley, CA. Push to talk technology meets a giant crane. But will Noah have the guts to scale the crane to drop the phone? Find out here!
Heads-up, phone phans! Nokia's planned an announcemnet for next Monday, October 13th - and has a viral campaign to hype things up in the meantime - and Motorola's announcing something new and "Clear" (as per their PR campaign) on Tuesday, October 14th. My bets? I have no idea what Nokia's gonna drop, but I bet MOTO unveils the Kraze smartphone for Verizon Wireless.
Stay tuned for all of the juicy bits as we get them. And...
Out of the box! It's the newest AT&T 3G phone, the pearly white Samsung a637. Low-end means high-tech these days, and this candybar packs 3G, support for XM Radio Mobile & AT&T Music/Video, and a 1.3 MP camera with video capture.
Might this be a peek into our near-term future? I hope so. You're looking at the HTC T8290, a shiny, sleek, badass looking piece of kit from HTC destined for Russia's Yota network.
What's neat about this device, besides its obvious good looks, is that it packs both GSM and WiMax connectivity so you can get your voice and high-speed data on in style. There's a 3.8", 800 x 480 hi-res display for all of that content you'll be...
First off, how cool is it that HTC dropped some significant cell phone news on the blogosphere via Twitter the other day? I'm not saying Twitter itself is/isn't cool, but rather that it's neat to see a tech company innovate when it comes to communicating with the media. Particularly so a tech company that uses the word "Innovation" in their marketing materials.
Second, my post about the possibility of the HTC Touch HD coming to...
An Android Community user - and T-Mobile Store Manager in Florida,
apparently - who goes by kaziko has posted the first user
review of T-Mobile's G1 Android phone. The review - which takes the
form of an ongoing forum thread - is summarized nicely in this post if
you don't care to dive into the 11+ page thread. Of course, if you do
there's text galore to tide you over until those G1s start
shipping on the 22nd.
So what's kaziko...
For the past few weeks I've been considering writing a post about how California's law against driving while holding a cell phone has done pretty much nothing to curb the habit - at least in the Oakland/Berkeley area where I live and work. Yesterday on my bike ride home from the office I figured out why I hadn't penned the post yet. The law has done something, I think. Sure, I still see at least three drivers with cellies in...
While i'm not exactly sure what's going on with some of these code names (Behold? Eternal? Huh?), I am sure of this: Samsung Mobile's bustin' out all over with their Xmas-time lineup of new phones for US carriers. Here's a little summary for you, best as I can cobble it out of truth, rumors, and other stuff that's just across the line from pure fiction:
T919 "Behold" (T-Mobile): This one's all but a lock. TouchWiz UI...
Okay, this is more like a "Paper DogFight" than a real dogfight since, you know, none of these phones are actually available yet. So what? Let's look at 'em on paper and see how they stack up so you can get a jump on arguing with your FaceBook Friends over which of these new phones is the best.Note that I'll include the US carrier for each phone in the competitor run-down. I'm well aware that the Storm is also available in...
This week's Noah's Bark podcast features an interview with Chloe Sladden, VP of Special Project Programming at Current TV. Chloe and I talked about "Hack the Debate," a collaboration between Current and Twitter which allows viewers to post "tweets" - in this case, short commentaries on the debate - some of which are chosen to run in a constant stream on the bottom portion of Current's TV broadcasts of the debates.Last night I watched the...
It's official! Verizon Wireless and BlackBerry have confirmed that the Storm will be available later this fall. The first BlackBerry touchscreen will make an exclusive debut in the U.S. with Verizon next month. Making changes to their OS, the BlackBerry Storm provides consumers with a full QWERTY keyboard in landscape mode and a SureType keyboard when in portrait. Find out more below in the official press release made...
When I first heard that T-mobile was offering a VoIP service, frankly, I wondered what could cause them to do such a thing, and what would motivate a customer to buy it. I've never paid much attention to VoIP because I've gotten so used to being mobile, 100% of the time. I went to my local T-Mobile store to check it out, and saw that they were pushing it as the hot new product.
The service is $10 a month for unlimited calls, to anywhere in...
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Latest winner
October 6, 2008 - Cogratulations to Omar Flores of TX. He is our week 17 winner of a brand new Motorola Q9m. "It feels good to know i won, I really did not expect for me to win, it came of great shock to me, thank you phonedog.com for the awesome phone!"