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  #21 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Michael Wise
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Posts: n/a
Default Verizon locks their phones?

In article <slrnfccde9.r4b.sjsobol@amethyst.justthe.net>,
Steve Sobol <sjsobol@JustThe.net> wrote:

> ["Followup-To:" header set to alt.cellular.sprintpcs.]
> On 2007-08-17, Michael Wise <no@spam.invalid> wrote:
>
> >> (You've got to love the government- they broke The Phone Company into
> >> a dozen regional companies to protect consumers from "monopoly" and
> >> then let all of them merge back into two or three to benefit
> >> consumers by the "economies of scale!")

> >
> > Isn't America great?! ; )

>
> Feh. That's why I get my landline telephone and Internet access from the
> cable company, and my wireless phone service from a company that doesn't
> do US landlines. US telcos suck ass; they're monolithic monsters that
> employ large numbers of obnoxious bureaucratic jerkoffs. :)



True, but the cable companies are not much better.



--Mike
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  #22 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Todd Allcock
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Default Verizon locks their phones?

At 17 Aug 2007 16:29:24 -0700 Michael Wise wrote:

> > Actually, Cingular (a independant company owned by SBC and

BellSouth)
> > bought AT&T Wireless,...

>
>
> Are you sure about that? My recollection from that time frame is

that
> Cingular was merely a rebranded name for the cellular service which

SBC
> implemented shortly after the SBC/Bell South merger.


The SBC/BellSouth merger was relatively recent- it happened only last
year. Cingular was a joint venture of the two companies (SBC owned a
little more- it was 55/45 or 60/40, IIRC) and merged three cellular
systems- SBC's SBMS, BellSouth (both TDMA), and PacBell's GSM system
out west. Cingular has operated under that name since 2000.

Cingular bought AT&T Wireless in 2004 just before ATTWS was about to
lose their name- when they were originally spun off from AT&T back in
2001, they had a license to operate under the AT&T name for a certain
time period.

Ironically, just before SBC bought AT&T (the long distance company),
they (AT&T) had planned to get back into wireless as a reseller of
Sprint. (The licensing deal that let AT&T Wireless use the AT&T name
also kept AT&T LD out of the wireless biz for the same timeframe.)
One can only imagine what confusion would've happened in the
marketplace if Cingular hadn't bought AT&T Wireless- ATTWS would've
quickly had to take on a new name, followed shortly by a DIFFERENT
AT&T wireless company being launched by a different company with
different equipment!


> They may have been
> considered independent (much in the same way VZW is technically
> independent from Verizon...but in reality it was the same company

with
> the same board members.


Sort of- just like with Verizon, however, there was another partner,
in this case BellSouth, with a major interest- (Verizon Wireless is
45% owned by Vodaphone, 55% by Verizon) After the SBC/BS merger,
Cingular now has one parent.


> ATTWS existed long before SBC bought AT&T.


Yes. ATTWS was, for a long time, part of AT&T (the LD company.)

> I know, because from about
> 1994-1999 (or perhaps 1998) I and the company (Wired Magazine) I

managed
> IT and landline/wireless service for used the A-side carrier

Cellular
> One (SF Bay Area market). AT&T incorporated C1 and rebranded as

ATTWS.


> During that time, I also had accounts with Pac Bell Wireless, Nextel,



> and GTE Wireless (Wired wanting me to stay on top of who had the

best
> coverage).
>
> I'm aware of the logistical hassles incurred after the by all the

sign
> changes, but the company was known as Cingular before it became
> ATTWS.



Cingular and ATTWS were two completly separate, unrelated companies.
At least until they "merged" (Cingular acquired them) in 2004. Then
SBC (Cingular's 1/2 owner) bought AT&T (LD- not the wireless company
Cingular already bought)in 2005, followed by SBC (now called AT&T)
merging with BS in '06. (Phew!)


> > > No part of the former Pac Bell Wireless is a
> > > part of today's VZW (to my knowledge).

> >
> > I believe you're right.


Actually we were both wrong! (Explained below!)

> > how did PacTel get stuck at 1900-MHz?

>
>
> Because, at least in the SF Bay Area, C1 (which ATTWS later

acquired)
> was already using the 800 MHz TDMA and GTE Wireless was using the

800
> MHz CDMA freqs.


You're missing my point- PacBell originally had the 800MHz B license
by default (the one Verizon now owns), just for being the local
Telco. That's how it worked in the early 80s- two licenses, one for
the local Bell, and the other to the highest bidder. PacBell either
was involved with Verizon's earliest predecessor or sold their
license to them. ATTWS bought the "A" license holder there.
(Cellular One?)
>
> > Generally the incumbent landline Telco got the 800-Mhz "B"
> > (which originally stood for "B"ell, as in Ma Bell!) license unless
> > they were shortsighted enoughbto sell it to someone else in case

this
> > whole cellphone thing turned out to be a fad! ;-)
> > (US West, now Qwest, sold most of their original licenses so here

in
> > Denver, Verizon is the B carrier, and AT&T is the "A" or

"A"lternate
> > carrier.
> >
> > > Sure, it's very likely that the thread curmudgeon was a

customer of
> > > one
> > > of one of the companies now part of VZW, but that company was

not
> > > VZW.

> >
> >
> > Or perhaps he assumes the original "B" carrier there, who must

have
> > bought the license from PacTel originally, was somehow affiliated
> > with them, since PacTel effectively sold themselves out of the
> > cellphone biz until the 1900MHz PCS-band auctions years later

allowed
> > them back in. (As it did Qwest in Colorado and a large part of

the
> > midwest.)

>
> I don't know of anytime when Pac Bell offered any sort of cellular

in
> the Chicagoland (where our thread curmudgeon suggests he lives).



Dont be so sure! According to Wikipedia:

"The cellular and paging unit of Pacific Telesis, PacTel Cellular,
was spun off in 1994 into a new company called AirTouch
Communications (AirTouch), leaving Pacific Telesis with only the
landline telephone company. Senior Pacific Telesis management moved
to the new company, thus leaving a new corporate culture to run the
old Pacific Telesis. In 1999, Airtouch merged with Britain's Vodafone
Group Plc to become Vodafone Airtouch Plc. In 2000, its U.S. wireless
assets were merged with those of Bell Atlantic Corp. to form the
joint venture Verizon Wireless..."

So PacTel Wireless was spun off of Pacific Telephone and became
Airtouch, then Verizon, leaving the local Telco to start again with
PacBell who eventually became Cingular then (the new) AT&T!

Apparenty there's more inbreeding in the cellular biz than there is
in the Appalachians!


--

"I don't need my cell phone to play video games or take pictures
or double as a Walkie-Talkie; I just need it to work. Thanks for
all the bells and whistles, but I could communicate better with
ACTUAL bells and whistles." -Bill Maher 9/25/2003


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  #23 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Dennis Ferguson
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Posts: n/a
Default Verizon locks their phones?

On 2007-08-17, Todd Allcock <elecconnec@AmericaOnLine.com> wrote:
> At 17 Aug 2007 12:38:45 -0700 Michael Wise wrote:
>> No part of the former Pac Bell Wireless is a
>> part of today's VZW (to my knowledge).

>
> I believe you're right. However, how did PacTel get stuck at 1900-
> MHz? Generally the incumbent landline Telco got the 800-Mhz "B"
> (which originally stood for "B"ell, as in Ma Bell!) license unless
> they were shortsighted enoughbto sell it to someone else in case this
> whole cellphone thing turned out to be a fad! ;-)


I think it went like this. The PacTel Cellular unit of Pacific Telesis
was the B-side AMPS operator in its area. It also supported and funded
Qualcomm's development of CDMA, which it ended up deploying. The wireless
unit was spun out of PacTel in about 1994, along with most of PacTel's
senior management, to become part of Airtouch Communications, which in
turn was acquired by (merged with?) Vodafone, which in turn was merged
with the wireless assets of Verizon (i.e. Bell Atlantic plus GTE) to
become Verizon Wireless.

Meanwhile the landline company left behind at PacTel, with their new
managers, decided to get back into the wireless business in 1996 or
1997 with the 1900 MHz GSM network, which they called Pacific Bell
Wireless. That network became part of Cingular, and then got sold
to T-Mobile after the AT&T Wireless acquisition.

> Or perhaps he assumes the original "B" carrier there, who must have
> bought the license from PacTel originally, was somehow affiliated
> with them, since PacTel effectively sold themselves out of the
> cellphone biz until the 1900MHz PCS-band auctions years later allowed
> them back in. (As it did Qwest in Colorado and a large part of the
> midwest.)


That's correct, except it was only a couple of years between the
spinoff of the cellular network and the construction of the PCS
network. I think the old management at PacTel decided that they'd
get richer in the spunoff, mostly-unregulated wireless business,
then the new managers at PacTel decided the wireless business was
good enough that they should get back in and compete in it too.

Dennis Ferguson
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  #24 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Todd Allcock
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Posts: n/a
Default Verizon locks their phones?

At 18 Aug 2007 02:08:00 +0000 Dennis Ferguson wrote:

<Snip excellent history lesson>


Thanks! That cleared it up and filled in the blanks.

Back when I was a Cingular TDMA customer out of Kansas City, I always
found it ironic that I had to roam on either Verizon or AT&T while in
California, despite the fact that Cingular had plenty of perfectly
good, yet incompatible, service buzzing all around me!

--

"I don't need my cell phone to play video games or take pictures
or double as a Walkie-Talkie; I just need it to work. Thanks for
all the bells and whistles, but I could communicate better with
ACTUAL bells and whistles." -Bill Maher 9/25/2003


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  #25 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Todd Allcock
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Posts: n/a
Default Verizon locks their phones?

At 17 Aug 2007 23:34:59 +0000 Steve Sobol wrote:


> Feh. That's why I get my landline telephone and Internet access

from the
> cable company, and my wireless phone service from a company that

doesn't
> do US landlines. US telcos suck ass; they're monolithic monsters

that
> employ large numbers of obnoxious bureaucratic jerkoffs. :)



As opposed to the non-monopolistic altruistic cable companies, and
Germany's non-monopolistic altruistic landline provider?

Yep, like the songsays, you're a rebel and you'll never ever be any
good, Steve! ;-)



--

"I don't need my cell phone to play video games or take pictures
or double as a Walkie-Talkie; I just need it to work. Thanks for
all the bells and whistles, but I could communicate better with
ACTUAL bells and whistles." -Bill Maher 9/25/2003


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  #26 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Jim Dubya
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Posts: n/a
Default Verizon locks their phones?

At my house in Laguna Niguel California. Verizon admits that they don't work
there. Sprint has full signal.

"Boomer" <nospam@aol.com> wrote in message
news:-YSdnTix29R_61jbnZ2dnUVZ_vmlnZ2d@comcast.com...
>
> "Drumstick" <no_thanks@you.com> wrote in message
> news:MPG.212ea9c38955d63498978e@newsgroups.bellsou th.net...
>>
>> And I say my experience is exactly 180 degrees the opposite of yours.
>> Sprint wasn't even available where I ma so I got Cingular and couldn't
>> make/receive a call outside my city limits. Went to Altell, better but
>> no joy and they kept my bill screwed up. Verizon works every day
>> everywhere I go and man I'm usually in the sticks let me tell you!
>>
>>

>
> .
>>
>> Drum--

>
> I'm not trying to stir this argument but just where do Verizon phones NOT
> work? I'm a satisfied Verizon customer for the last 3 years & have yet to
> find a location without signal. I suppose I haven't traveled to those
> areas yet but from NJ to Florida they seem to have it covered.
>



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  #27 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Jim Dubya
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Default Verizon locks their phones?

I was with Airtouch Cellular before they were acquired by Verizon. Now play
nice and go drink some more Verizon Kool-Aid.


"Michael Wise" <no@spam.invalid> wrote in message
news:no-DCD710.10083917082007@c-61-68-245-199.per.connect.net.au...
> In article <AQ2xi.78601$kK1.30360@newsfe14.phx>,
> "Jim Dubya" <jimdubya@nospam.com> wrote:
>
>
>> I do have to admit that Verizon as a marketing department that is
>> actually
>> quite amazing, but in reality, that is all that they have. Take it from
>> me
>> because I had been with Verizon for 10 years and had been brain-washed by
>> them....

>
> Since VZW has existed for only seven years, how could you have been with
> them for ten years?
>
> What else are you fabricating?
>
>
>
> --Mike



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  #28 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Michael Wise
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Posts: n/a
Default Verizon locks their phones?

In article <XBvxi.39652$Vk6.34260@newsfe07.phx>,
"Jim Dubya" <jimdubya@nospam.com> wrote:

> I was with Airtouch Cellular before they were acquired by Verizon. Now play
> nice and go drink some more Verizon Kool-Aid.


So then you admit that you weren't a VZW customer for 10 years as you
earlier claimed?

--Mike

>
>
> "Michael Wise" <no@spam.invalid> wrote in message
> news:no-DCD710.10083917082007@c-61-68-245-199.per.connect.net.au...
> > In article <AQ2xi.78601$kK1.30360@newsfe14.phx>,
> > "Jim Dubya" <jimdubya@nospam.com> wrote:
> >
> >
> >> I do have to admit that Verizon as a marketing department that is
> >> actually
> >> quite amazing, but in reality, that is all that they have. Take it from
> >> me
> >> because I had been with Verizon for 10 years and had been brain-washed by
> >> them....

> >
> > Since VZW has existed for only seven years, how could you have been with
> > them for ten years?
> >
> > What else are you fabricating?
> >
> >
> >
> > --Mike

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  #29 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Steve Sobol
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Default Verizon locks their phones?

On 2007-08-18, Michael Wise <no@spam.invalid> wrote:

> True, but the cable companies are not much better. >


Depends on which one. Charter Cable, in this area, has been great (the
former High Desert Cablevision - Charter is currently a patchwork of
smaller systems that they bought; I understand they're working on bringing
everything under the same umbrella).

Adelphia in Cleveland was great when I used them a few years ago. Much better
than Cablevision, before they downsized to only serve greater New York City.
Of course, they went bankrupt and got sold off to Time Warner. No idea
how Time Warner is out there.

The cable companies have also been much better about opening up their networks
to competitors and not subsequently trying to screw said competitors.

--
Steve Sobol, Victorville, California PGP:0xE3AE35ED
"Drench yourself in words unspoken / Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins / The rest is still unwritten"
- Natasha Beddingfield

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  #30 (permalink)  
Old November 15th, 2007
Steve Sobol
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Posts: n/a
Default Verizon locks their phones?

On 2007-08-18, Todd Allcock <elecconnec@AmericaOnLine.com> wrote:

> As opposed to the non-monopolistic altruistic cable companies


My cable company has much more of a clue about decent customer service than
any phone company. SBC tried to screw me out of $200 after they broke my
dialtone and DSL in Ohio, for two months, saying they couldn't refund any of
my money for the DSL and only $5 for the landline since I had a dialtone
(which I did, but still was unablee to make calls).

Verizon isn't as evil as SBC, but they're stupid, and I've had problems with
them out here.

And yes, I believe cable companies are less prone to screwing people over
than telcos.

> Germany's non-monopolistic altruistic landline provider?


OK, you got me there. :) Their customer service, however, has proven MUCH
better than either of the wireless carriers I've used between 2000 and now.

--
Steve Sobol, Victorville, California PGP:0xE3AE35ED
"Drench yourself in words unspoken / Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins / The rest is still unwritten"
- Natasha Beddingfield

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