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Mr. Roques
Researcher
Thursday January 10, 2013 5:41:39 PM
no ratings

But what if the company bundles it with cable or internet service (or all three of them) and the actual cost of having a phone is minimal. They may be betting on an occasional long distance call.

DrT
IQ Crew
Wednesday January 9, 2013 10:35:02 PM
no ratings
I was concern on the conference at the initial point but got used to iPhone's conference and easily add new individuals into the call.
Kim Davis
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 9, 2013 3:54:37 PM
no ratings

Probably you'll get spam text messages instead, Lin.  :D

Ariella
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 9, 2013 3:37:03 PM
no ratings

@lin I suppose that is something that cell phone designers will have to work on now that so many people use a cell as their only phone.

lin crampton
IQ Crew
Wednesday January 9, 2013 3:33:47 PM
no ratings

@Kim -- conference calling could be challenging if phones are running diverse protocols, or even if from different vendors.

Conference calling aside, I need to get in gear and join the 35.8% without a landline.  Another benefit to switching from residential landline to mobile would be a reduced number of robocalls and telemarketer calls.

Kim Davis
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 9, 2013 3:27:10 PM
no ratings

I admit, I don't have the need for mobile conferencing, but there are good mobile conferencing solutions, aren't there?

lin crampton
IQ Crew
Wednesday January 9, 2013 3:22:21 PM
no ratings

Ariella -- I guess I will soon be joining the ranks of the 35.8% without landlines in their home (haven't had a business landline since the last century).  The one thing I will miss is the landline's conference feature, the ability to pick up a phone call and then get others on the same call with me.

Ariella
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 9, 2013 1:43:41 PM
no ratings

@Kim That's true. If you're not using a landline, you don't gain anything from taking on a bundle package offerd by Verizon or Cablevision. 

Kim Davis
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 9, 2013 12:37:46 PM
no ratings

That's amazing.  Must have been 90 percent or more once had landlines?  Bad news for phone/cable companies, with people migrating away from traditional cable TV packages too.

Ariella
Thinkernetter
Tuesday January 8, 2013 7:12:11 PM
no ratings

@Kim According to this http://bgr.com/2012/12/21/wireless-only-adoption-rate-35-8-percent-262622/ We're very close to hitting the post-landline era. The Center for Disease Control has released some preliminary results from its National Health Interview Survey for 2012 and has found that 35.8% of American households no longer have any sort of landline telephone in their houses and rely exclusively upon wireless. What's more, just under 16% of American households said they "received all or almost all calls on wireless telephones despite also having a landline telephone," meaning that more than half of all American households either have no landline service at all or have a landline service but rely almost exclusively on wireless.

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Todd Watson
Todd Watson   6/18/2013   Post a comment
The IBM Smarter Commerce Global Summit in Monaco kicked into high gear today, and we've already begun to see news emerging from that lovely city-state by the sea.
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