On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 09:06, John Jason Jordan <[email protected]> wrote: > On Wed, 4 May 2011 04:54:55 -0400 > Brad Alexander <[email protected]> dijo: > >>I have been researching this since I am in the same position with >>AT&T. The primary phone on our line is $90/month, and the secondary is >>$30. I called AT&T and asked them if they could help "keep an AT&T >>customer from becoming a former AT&T customer." Why should I pay >>$120/month for 700m talk/unlimited text/no data and be shackled into a >>two year contract, when the pay-as-you-go plans are as little as >>$35/month for all-you-can-eat, including data. >> >>Unfortunately, the downside is that all of the PAYG services I have >>found so far (I've looked at Virgin Mobile and Boost, seemingly the >>two largest) appear to be on Sprint's network (in the US), and >>therefore are CDMA. Since the N900 is GSM, it goes back to, for me >>anyway, an internet tablet like the N810. > > I don't know anything about the N810, but if it is an AT&T phone it > should work on T-Mobile.
That's the thing, although the 770, n800, n810, n810 WiMax and n900 form a series (of maemo-powered devices), only the n900 is a phone. The others are "MIDs" or "Palmtops" or really fancy "PDAs" or "Internet Tablets" or whatever you want to call them. They are not sized as a phone and have no phone hardware or software. Cheers, Kelly Clowers -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected] Archive: http://lists.debian.org/[email protected]

