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I have very little use for the cell phone and I do not text.  I have more important things to do with my life.

I’ve had to accept the fact that both my wife and I need cell phones since we travel so much, but we both have no-contract, pay-as-you-go phones.

When people find out about this, they scoff.  We are fools for paying more when we could get a sweet annual contract from one of the major companies for only a few cents a day.

Of course, I’ve never heard of anyone who is happy with their phone contract.  They all seem to want a 2-year committment which is way too long when technology advances as quickly as it does.

Then they end up paying penalties for ending the contract early and switching to something else.  And if they have complaints about service or features, they can’t just switch immediately — they feel they are stuck.

So who’s the sucker, Mr. Stucker?

Well, now with a new round of regulations giving phone companies the right to charge for the amount of internet usage you access, people are really getting uptight.

I just saw a great article that provides a loophole where you can get out of your AT&T contract immediately with no penalty.

I hope this eases the sting of being stuck with a major phone contract.

WADE

tags: AT&T, internet usage, cell phone contract, text messaging

Filed under internet by on . Comment#

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Mobile marketing is not a new phenomenon it has been around for 4 or 5 years, basically it was started with mobile phone companies sending text messages (SMS) to your mobile phone and trying to get you to buy a new mobile phone from them. Then you had the text messages that asked you to call a certain number; which if you did cost you a small fortune, these were mainly scams. However, times have changed and so has the mobile phone, smart-phone mobile media technology has come on leaps and bounds and is pushing ahead of internet technology.
Business:Marketing-Direct Articles from EzineArticles.com

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I’m always taking notes — when I read a book, talk on the phone — or I often record a workshope or seminar and pay to have it transcribed.

I find it keeps things in my mind more firmly — almost memorized — and I can refer back to my notes on computer with the SEARCH function to find whatever I’m trying to look up.

That’s why I’m so pumped up about this Note-Taking Nerd. He’s a marketing wonk and he is interested in the same people I am — Dan Kenned, Frank Kern, Gary Halbert and that gang.  He’s got lots of his notes on his web site and is very generous about sending things out to subscribers of his blog.

Oh, yeah, he also posts videos.

Check out the Nerd — and you may become a nerd yourself.

WADE