TELECOM Digest OnLine - Sorted: Re: Nextel False Advertising


Re: Nextel False Advertising


Joseph (JoeOfSeattle@yahoo.com)
Mon, 01 Aug 2005 10:08:45 -0700

On 30 Jul 2005 22:22:28 -0000, John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: It is not a 'major crisis'; but rather,
> just quite inconvenient when you are sold a device (commonly known as
> a 'cell phone') with the assurance it will work 'anywhere', and you
> have no particular reason to distrust the seller of same only to then
> later find out the seller was full of hot air.

Pat, I know you've been around long enough that for any claim on any
product you have to have some history from others or history which you
have discovered yourself. If you believed every claim that came down
the pike you'd be buying into all the scams that spammers throw at you
never mind all the 419 scams that are around. As in everything else
don't believe everything you see in print, on TV or on the internet.
Some people's "truth" is not necessarily *your* truth! Don't ASSume.
We all know what that stands for!

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: If a cellular telephone company told
> you 'we have no roaming charges' would you take that to mean (1) we
> have arrangements with other carriers and do not charge you _extra money_
> for roaming, or would you take that statement to mean (2) we do not
> have any roaming at all? Since in the past, the subject of excessive
> charges for 'roaming' on another carrier's network has often times
> been an issue (since resolved by many carriers with 'national' plans
> such as the old AT&T), wouldn't you think that statement would be
> interpreted as (1) above? PAT]

Almost every carrier in their advertising will have disclaimers such
as "not available everywhere" indicating that their service may not be
suitable for use in all locations.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well now, please remember this was not
my problem originally; just a problem left for me to clean up. My
nephew Justin and his wife thought up Nextel as the way to go. No one
has ever accused Justin of being an Einstein in disguise; frankly he
is a couple of sacks short of a full load ... _they_ decided on Nextel
as a good deal, not me. They never asked my opinion. It worked okay in
Florida, the land of Jeb Bush and Orlando, and Walt Disney World; the
where my sister died on the street due to cirrosis of the liver
(drinking too much iced tea I guess); so why wouldn;t Nextel work
here? After all, we have a 'major highway' going though town, Highway
75 otherwise known as Penn Street. All I know is Justin showed up here
to be of help to Uncle Pat and was confronted by a frantic wife who
could not understand why Nextel failed her. I gave him a prepaid
phone from AT&T/Cingular Wireless and a Yahoo Messenger account to
tide him over. PAT]

Post Followup Article Use your browser's quoting feature to quote article into reply
Go to Next message: Tony P.: "Re: Last Laugh! Spammer, age 35, Meets "Moscow Rules""
Go to Previous message: Lee Sweet: "Re: Nextel False Advertising"
May be in reply to: TELECOM Digest Editor: "Nextel False Advertising"
Next in thread: DevilsPGD: "Re: Nextel False Advertising"
TELECOM Digest: Home Page