It’s all I use, and that is rarely too. They have their uses but I’d hate to be reliant upon one.
Yeah it probably is the location. But when in Denver the service also sucks. Not always but sometimes its a lot of “what?” “say again”.
Here is a newer pic of some clouds floating by our house. That’s not ground fog. Those are clouds.
To ‘maintain the number’ is, however, one of the reasons why we keep the landline. I missed the ‘solely’ in your post, please excuse me.
enipla: See ??
Oh, I know I can send them to people, but I have no way of receiving them back without having to turn on my phone, and one-way messaging is kinda useless.
Yes, it always ALWAYS works and always with good sound
You can’t really disagree with my experience - it’s completely subjective. Where I live (London), there really isn’t a noticeable difference in quality.
Today I actually did use the landline for a very long call; it’s still cheaper for national rate numbers (like for call centres) and only landlines are actually free for freephone numbers. That’s for the UK, though, and I imagine that’s not true internationally.
We have a landline. It’s reliable, cheap, and we’re both in the habit of having our cellphones off or not around. Also, one landline = many phones in house, again negating the problem of not having your cell near.
Also,
- My cell is paid for by my employer, and
- We pay very little for long distance on the landline - in fact, the deal we get for LD on the landline cannot be replicated by any plan we could get on the cells.
I’m 37 and my wife is 30.
I disagree with your disagreeent ;). You may have good service with your phone but no cell phone is immune to a building’s steel structure. That’s not a subjective observation, that’s the reality of anything carried over radio waves.
After I got my cell, I kept my land line for a year to maintain my DSL. I can’t remember how I discovered it (not widely advertised) but my carrier offers stand alone DSL. Land line gone the next day. A check with your carrier would be worthwhile.
Since the apartment building I live in put a wifi router on the office computer, I get free internet. Just me and my cell phone now.
I find that cells are fine for pragmatic conversations conveying basic information but for actual social conversations a landline is necessarily to prevent frustrated insanity. What I find really amusing is back when everything was landlines, there used to be a big deal in advertising about phone service quality (“pin drop” - and you could barely discern the difference in quality except for international calls) but even the worst landline back then was better than cell phones now.
However I rarely have long social conversations on the phone anyway so if I wasn’t sharing a landline (well not even really landline, it’s one of those cable phones) with other people I probably wouldn’t bother. Most of the people I would ever have a long conversation with I can video chat with on my computer.
I’m 29, and I haven’t had a landline in years. Why would I need two numbers, two ways to reach me, when one of the ways isn’t always accessible to me?
The last time I had a landline was back when I was still in college. The only reason I had it was b/c I had dialup at the time. :eek: (That was b/c either I was too broke to afford better Internet service, or b/c the apt. I lived in at the time had no better options. Which would mean I was too broke to afford a better apt. building!)
When the line wasn’t tied up by my computer, I rarely got any calls, and when I did they were invariably either:
- a telemarketer, and I didn’t want to talk to them
or
- my mother, and I didn’t want to talk to her, either.
Easiest call-screening ever.
We technically have a landline, as it is bundled in with our internet & cable. For a while, we only used it to harass telemarketers, but after a while we just unplugged the phone. I called to cancel it, but Comcast knocked down the price of the bundle to cheaper than the price of internet+cable, so the line remains, even if there’s no phone plugged into it.
As opposed to two cans and some string?
Yes, how dare those sonsabitches offer us emerging technologies at our convenience!
I was mobile only for a little while when I bought my current house. A new job, and the shift to working from a home-office, required that I install a land-line for work. That is the only land-line phone in the house and I only use it for business. If you want me, dial my mobile! Haha.
Two person household here - both of us way over 50 years old.
Nope - no landline in this house. (Internet is through cable company.)
We each have a cell phone and that works just fine for us.
I dropped our landline when I realized the only people calling it were telemarketers. All of our friends and family know to reach us on cell phones.
- I have DSL so there’s that, but I like having a land line. I appreciated it a few weeks ago when our power was out and my cell barely had charge or minutes.
I keep a cheap cell for emergencies. I pay 30 dollars every few months when my minutes run out.
No landline. I’m 30 and my husband’s 28.
We rarely call anyone other than our parents, and they’ve learned to put up with the occasional quirks of our cell phones - the do drop calls maybe once every 3-4 calls - for the return benefit of us always calling them with free weekend minutes so they don’t have to pay the long-distance charges. 'Cause my parents are cheap enough that they worry about that.
My phone is provided by work, and all of the fees - including unlimited calls and text - are covered by work as long as we don’t abuse the privilege. Apparently a once-a-week call to my parents, occasional calls to friends, and ~10 texts a month to my husband don’t constitute abuse.
Hello this is Steph from Qwest, I am sorry to hear that your home service doesn’t seem to be performing very well. I would be happy to have a repair specialist look into it for you and see if we can resolve any issues. If you would like additional assistance, please feel free to email me at talktous@qwest.com attention Steph. Please include your phone number, address and best contact number for a repairs specialist to get in touch with you.
thank you
Steph Lake
Manager - Consumer Affairs Team
talktous@qwest.com - attention Steph
www.twitter.com/TalkToQwest
"At Qwest your account information is confidential and protected by law, so I need your permission to access the account.”
I have one because the security system needs to call out. It drives me crazy that I’m essentially paying twice for my security system - I don’t even know what the number is. Doesn’t hurt to have it for emergencies, but if I didn’t need the system I wouldn’t have one.
ETA - I haven’t had a call drop in years. Are all you people fumbling Neandertals who also live in Saskatchewan?
ETAA - looking above, WTF?
My wife (39) and I (40) have a land line as well as cell phones. We kept the LL as two of our boys do not have cell phones because they have enough distractions. The only time the LL is used is by them, their friends and the occasional incoming sales calls.
We’re seeing more and more of this. Companies are checking message boards to see if their names are mentioned by posters, and they spam for their products or sometimes respond to complaints.