I also have an iPhone and get an employee discount, but my bill is a little less than Munch’s because I don’t have texting at all. And I don’t know where he works, but I do not work for AT&T but instead get the employee discount because my employer is a big customer. (I think my discount is about 16%. A co-worker who used to work for HP gets a bigger discount, because HP has a better deal with AT&T than mine does.)
So if your employer is at all large, check if you can get a discount on cell services.
I buy a $20 60-minute card every 3 months, but I have double minutes so that gives me 120 minutes. Add a bonus code and I usually get 140 min or so. 46 min a month is plenty for me, I don’t talk on the cell phone that much.
Yup - it’s essentially a “I work for a big company and get a discount” discount.
fervour - Web browsing is excellent. I live in a 3G area, which helps. Here’s an old map of people publishing their download speeds: Map.
Some people really don’t like typing on it. To those people, I say, “Bah!” There’s a learning curve on it, but once you just start letting the spellcheck pick things up and not backspacing every single time you make an error, my speed surpasses anything I’ve seen someone on a blackberry do.
Pay as you go for $10/mo, I just use the phone for emergencies and ‘where the hell are you, you’re late for the movie’ calls. It seems to be cheaper to do that and have a $30 land line than have a bells & whistles cell service. In Greater Vancouver.
All sorts of organizations have discount plans. I know that Sprint offers a discount, for example, to Avon representatives. (I used to be one.) If you have an opportunity to be in a retail location for your provider when it’s time to re-up your contract, you should ask outright, “I work for X, do you offer a discount to our employees?” They won’t ever offer it to you, but if you ask, they have to give it to you.
But before replacing the phone, check on eBay. All sorts of batteries for both cell phones and household cordless phones are available on eBay at surprising prices.