How many should you own?
Posted: Thu Jan 19, 2017 5:49 am
How many electronic devices do you think a person or maybe a family should own?
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I think VOIP "Voice Over Internet Protocol" is becoming more popular, and a lot of cable and phone companies now use internet cables like Fibre and TV cables like COAX cable to transmit phone signals, so landline are now similar to VOIP by using the internet to make calls.Skeithex wrote:It's nearly impossible to find anyone with a land line telephone anymore. Only the really old people still use them and their children are slowly moving from land lines to cell phones.
A few cell phone service companies in Canada are also landline phone, internet, and cable TV service companies, and you can sometimes save a few dollars by bundling your cell phone, landline, cable TV, and internet service with one company.Skeithex wrote:I think business will always use landlines but I'm sure they will vanish from homes.
I never buy into the bundles for companies, if you just get one or two then you won't be spending as much.froggyboy604 wrote:A few cell phone service companies in Canada are also landline phone, internet, and cable TV service companies, and you can sometimes save a few dollars by bundling your cell phone, landline, cable TV, and internet service with one company.Skeithex wrote:I think business will always use landlines but I'm sure they will vanish from homes.
Unfortunately, standalone cell phone service plans in Canada and other countries are very expensive where the plans can cost hundreds of dollars a month if you want unlimited or thousands of minutes of talk calls, unlimited text, and more than 10GB of bandwidth or unlimited data service. The overage fees for going over your talk minutes, or data limits are also more expensive than going over your data limit on regular wired internet like DSL and Cable where you only pay a few dollars for an extra 50GB of data on Wired internet.. The basic cell plans cost $80 a month for 300 local calling minutes, unlimited text and 1GB of data.
If someone is poor like working a minimum wage job, or unemployed, they may only be able to afford to subscribe to a $10 a month landline as their primary phone line, or use voip/voice over internet protocol programs like Skype, Google Hangouts, and Facebook Messenger to make calls over a DSL or cheaper cable connection if they only subscribe to cheap broadband, and not both cheap broadband, and cheap landline phone service.
A lot of people these days run a business from their home or small shop/office to make extra money because they are not earning enough from their minimum wage job, or they gave up finding a job which pays enough money to pay for rent, food, utilities, and medication.
Paying $10 a month for a landline is good for home businesses since a landline has better call quality, better reliability, and unlimited talk minutes compared to cell phone plans which are more limited, and can cost hundreds of dollars if you subscribe to unlimited plans.