The MSNBC phone service comparison article makes for interesting reading. It’s interesting that they rated Verizon Wireless as the best of the bunch (under the “better” category). Due to my experiences with Verizon, they are one of the few companies that are on my permanent shit list, and that I will never recommend that anyone do business with. Truly scum. On the other hand, my SprintPCS experience has been fairly innocuous. My billing has never been screwed up, although wait times are slightly long (and getting worse), when I’ve contacted the customer service, the front-line reps have all at least been courteous and are often helpful and knowledgable, and reception in the LA area is nothing less than phenomenal (it’s also almost always been acceptable when I’ve been travelling). Of course, their site is down a little more often than I would have liked, and Claire really is horrible, but comparatively speaking, Sprint’s online service was lightyears beyond Verizon’s. A year and a half ago, when I dumped Verizon forever, they didn’t even offer invoicing and usage details on their site. Can you imagine that?

Having only been with T-Mobile for less a week now, it’s perhaps a bit early to pass final judgement, but right now, I am very satisfied with the customer service. The website is sorta not quite there (the Sidekick component is run by Danger anyway, so it’s not a super huge deal) although I am rather disappointed by how they report minute usage (as a lump sum, not separating out service calls or peak/offpeak times – you can, however find out by talking to a service rep – what a waste of everyone’s time). I’ll talk about the customer service when I do a full writeup of my hiptop (it’s gonna be looong), but I have to say, response time is great (average of about 2-3 minutes to the front-line, no matter what time of day), the reps are helpful and are quick to forward you to the proper 2nd-tier groups when necessary (for the times I’ve called, there has been no hesitation in sending me to the wireless data group), when I was escalated to L3 tech support, I had a great chat w/ the WDS engineer (who escalated my problem to Danger and called me back to follow up, as promised). I’m fearful of what’ll happen to this service if (when) they merge with Cingular.

Speaking of which, while the network seems a bit weaker (part of it is because out in California they are using Cingular’s network, part of it is probably also due to the Sidekick’s reception – it’s hard to follow up on the Motorola Timeport’s reception though, that thing was a tank. And the debug modes rocked) Overall, it’s not too bad. I get decent coverage at home and I actually get reception in ‘the cave’ at work where even my trusty Timeport fails me.

/rant

Now that I’m on T-Mobile, I need to try to figure out whether I really need my SprintPCS phone anymore. I want to keep the number, as it’s been my primary number for the past year and a half. SprintPCS offers a $5/mo Vacation Plan, and call-forwarding for $0.10/minute, which I think would be okay. Going through my invoices, I noticed that of the usual $53.82 I pay every month, $8.83 (over 16%) was going towards taxes and other regulatory fees. Here’s an example:

Taxes and Regulatory Related Charges
Los Angeles City Utility Users Tax 4.33
California 911 Tax 0.32
California Universal Lifeline Tele Service 0.63
California Teleconnect Fund Surcharge 0.13
California Relay Service Device Fund 0.21
California High Cost Fund Surcharge 0.62
California State Excise Tax 0.16
USA Federal Tax 1.38
Other Surcharges and Fees
California P.U.C. Tax 0.05
USA Regulatory Obligations & Fees 1.00
  8.83

Now, taxes are all well and good, but what I want to know is, if I’m paying this much every single month (as well as other cellular customers), why the hell is service so bad? And why is the FCC pandering to the telecommunications companies, and are not accountable to us, the taxpayers (which according to the CTIA, as of the writing of this post is comprised of 137,458,902 subscribers)? To wit:

Hopefully, we can all agree that telephone number portability is a good thing for the consumer. It saves him the hassle of changing his number and prevents him being held hostage and staying with an otherwise crappy service. The Telecommunications Act in 1996 made number portability a statutory requirement, and gave a deadline of December 31, 1998 for land lines, [according the FCC FAQ] wireless numbers were exempt from these deadlines (see Illuminet Whitepaper (PDF), FCC Telephone Number Portability FAQ). Now sometime after (I dug through dockets, but 1) I’m lazy, 2) the FCC search engine sorta sucks. Try FCC 98-82 (PDF) and FCC 97-74, FCC 99-19), the FCC actually called for a deadline on Wireless Number Portability. Here’s a Bellcore press release (selling solutions to meet WNP) back in September, 1998 talking about the upcoming Phase I deadlines.

In July (FCC 02-215), the industry was granted another forbearance. The November 24, 2002 deadline was shifted a year. The current deadline is November 24, 2003. According to this CNET article: “This is the third occasion on which carriers have been given more time to make number portability occur. The FCC issued its first delay in 1998.”

Now, if you believe the telco lobbyists (led by Airtouch and GTE, now Verizon), phone number portability is a bad thing. They say stuff like:”…the U.S. wireless market is already highly competitive and that no substantial barriers exist that prevent customers from choosing the wireless service that best serves their needs.” Also, from the same article is this laughable piece of FUD: “The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has stated that wireless carriers must implement WLNP in November 2003, giving carriers little more than a year to make the necessary network and OSS upgrades that will allow for number portability.” Yes, it’s one year if you don’t count the past 5 years they had already been delaying. Who are they kidding? If the competition is so great, then why do all the carriers sucks so much? (I’ve written about my Verizon experiences before) Has it occurred to any of these people that maybe the reason there’s so much churn is because they provide horrible “service”? “Over half (52 percent) of subscribers responding to the survey said the availability of number portability made it more likely they would switch carriers.” Doesn’t that number itself practically scream that Wireles Number Portablity is in fact desperately needed, and that not having it is anti-competitive?

Here’s some extra links I found while getting this out of my system:

Oh, hey, just saw that I had missed this link, here’s a Newsletter from January 28, 2002 entitled A Number Game that covers the same topic.

La la la, ultracompact cameras… A lot of stuff at dpr’s Photokina 2002 show report. It’s a shame that a lot of the camera’s I’m comparing don’t have start-up and shot-to-shot times.

  Minolta Dimage Xi Casio EX-M1 Fujifilm F402 Sony DSC-FX77
Lens 37-111mm eq 37mm eq 39mm eq 37mm eq
Aperture f2.8-3.6 f2.5 f3.2 f2.8
Shutter 2 – 1/1000 sec 1/4 – 1/6400 sec 1/4 – 1/2000s 1/30 – 1/1000s
Sensitivity ISO 50-400 ? ISO 200-400 (800-1600 @ 1MP) ISO 100-400
Res 3.2MP 1.3MP 2.1MP (sCCD 4MP) 4.0MP
Size 85 x 72 x 20mm 88 x 55 x 11.3mm 77 x 69 x 22mm 98.1 x 71.0 x 27.0mm
Weight 130g 87g 125g 185g
Startup 1.2s 1-2s ? <1s
S2S ? 0.6s ? ?
Extra   MP3 macro Bluetooth, Zeiss Lens, swivel
Price $350? $300? $350 Unavailable in US

Right now I’m tending toward the F402… f3.2 (slightly disappointing), but being able to shoot decent ISO 1600 (check out these sample pictures from a similar class imager? Tempting… The Sony probably has the best image quality (nice Carl Zeiss lens), and the Bluetooth/BIP support and swivel are very tempting, but it looks like it’s not available in the US right now (Japan and Europe only currently). Canon has a new IXUS coming out soon, I believe, but we’ll have to see. It’s unfortunate that none of these cameras use CF (the Canon does).

Hmm, I’m #1 on hiptop on daypop, which sorta makes sense I guess, seeing as until recently this blog has been a fairly well respected, mediumly trafficked tech/web blog that has, over the past week turned into the Hiptop Junkie Blog. Which is not too bad, as a few weeks before it was the ‘tired of doing this, taking way too much time, time to go into reruns blog’ (still in the plans, sorta).

Too bad the guest blog on boingboing doesn’t have permalinks. Xeni has some super interesting stuff on those ER1 robots up right now. Saw those at E3 this year. Fun stuff.

Speaking of boingboing, saw a post entitled Sidekick’s browser blows that was slightly misattributed/misconstrued. I saw this post (while I was showing my friend about Blöödhag) and posted a reply in the discussions on my hiptop so the browser can’t be that bad.

All Hiptop, All the Time

Some people have questioned the usefulness of the hiptop, but if you’re ever out and about, trust me, it’s indispensible. Remember the last time you had to meet up with someone and they didn’t have a cell phone on them and you didn’t know if you had missed them, or they had missed you? Yeah, having the hiptop around is as big of a leap as when cell phones became consumer devices. It’s the first (acceptably usable) generation of the communications devices that will truly change how we interact. Here’s a real listing of how it came in handy the other night night:

  • I was sitting in the theater and realized I didn’t remember where the afterparty was. Checked my mail (the find feature is sorely missing, although the sorting worked OK) only to find the message wasn’t POPed, so I used mail2web (hmm, mail2pda is slightly more optimized, but POP only)
  • After finding the name of the place, I went to Citysearch, found the location, and got walking directions
  • In the morning, while we were discussing the movie, I did an IMDB search and got the cast info. Also in discussion, I looked up how many IP addresses are available under IPv6 (340 trillion trillion trillion addresses)

Now, while that last thing (and all the aiming, emailing, and boingboing surfing in between) was mostly for entertainment, those first two things were pretty majorly useful, and saved a lot of headache. With a hiptop, you can check traffic reports online (color really would be useful in this case, though), if you’re in a club or other noisy environment (or a quiet environment where talking is a no-no, or where synchronous communication is otherwise impossible), you can still exchange time-dependent messages either via IM or email. Plus, just think about all the useful information online, and all those times where “if you only had access to a web you could.”

So finally, here it is, easy to use and unmetered (no worries of counting cents/kb). Now, if this thing had ssh…