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#1 |
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Kasper's Automated Slave
Join Date: Nov 1997
Posts: 6,151
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Rogers says quarter million iPhones sold in Canada
Rogers Wireless, Apple's exclusive iPhone provider in Canada, said Tuesday that September quarter sales of the touchscreen handset totaled more than a quarter million units, boosting both its subscriber count and average user revenue.
Electronista reports the telecoms company sold and activated a total of 255,000 iPhone 3Gs between the device's July 11th launch and the end of September, helping the carrier grow its net subscriber additions to 191,000 while increasing average income per user "considerably above" the previous levels thanks to added data fees. The sheer number of iPhone subscribers put a strain on Rogers through subsidies but should result in "considerable returns" over the length of the three-year contracts, the company says, courtesy of both higher monthly plans as well as reduced turnover from customers remaining loyal to have access to the device. Rogers' iPhone deal is also expected to have a significant impact on rivals, none of which run GSM-based networks compatible with the iPhone. The carrier said about a third of its customers are either converting from a competing provider or are new to cellphone service. Desjardins Securities analyst Joseph MacKay believes the iPhone's affect on Rogers' rivals will become clearer in their financial disclosures later this week. He anticipates that Bell Canada's subscriber adds will fall from 137,000 in the spring to 85,000 in the summer as a result of potential customers either staying with or switching to Rogers. Telus is expected to fare better but should still see a decline of eight percent year over year to 125,000 new customers in the period. |
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#2 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Ireland
Posts: 8,559
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Wow, imagine at their prices still that many wanted to get Rogered!
Collecting my SSD iMac Fry-die. :D
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#3 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 1,415
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I wonder if Rogers will ever realise that they could have even greater sales if they actually gave people a good deal.
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#4 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2002
Posts: 277
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Have you checked their plans recently? They're perfectly reasonable compared to anyone else - especially considering nobody actually needs unlimited data and a GB or two is fine.
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#5 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,066
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Perhaps you should do a direct comparison. Don't forget that the US dollar is nearly 25% higher. Last edited by Abster2core; 10-28-2008 at 11:58 AM.. |
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#6 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,066
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#7 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: Somewhere far, far away
Posts: 2,858
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This is only recent. The US dollar has gained 25% in as little as one month. A little over a month ago, US and Can dollars were at parity. The wild market fluctuations makes this 25% meaningless...I guarantee the US dollar will plunge back to down to what it was a month ago (or worse) in the next month.
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#8 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1
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do they still force you to sign a 3 year contract? even if monthly pricing is comparable to competitors, it's that requirement that stops me and a few others I know from getting one.
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#9 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,066
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#10 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,066
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As for a requirement the stops you and a few others, the numbers are really low. For the most part, it is pure bull. |
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#11 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: Somewhere far, far away
Posts: 2,858
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#12 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 196
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a) is slightly more expensive b) has worse features (no unlimited text messaging) c) has terrible coverage (only 2 major cities and 2 major highways) Before Apple threatened to take away the iPhone Rogers was really screwing us. A criticised business strategy by some, but quite effective. Most A-band, provincial carriers (at least in the west) seem to offer better contract than Rogers, unless Rogers has lowered its prices recently |
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#13 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 374
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When I got my iPhone, my hope is to use it for a least three years. If I do that, I can't switch to another carrier. So while it's pain to contract, it doesn't matter because I'm staying with the iPhone even if I upgrade. (so far I have not) But I can't leave unless Apple opens up other carriers. Won't anytime soon. If that's what you say is stopping you, it's BS. |
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#14 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 63
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Seriously, that's a paltry amount of data. I use my data plan daily (with an EVDO card) and do little more than surf with it. I don't download large files, but I do occasionally stream some video. It's incredibly easy to use up 2GB in a single week. |
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#15 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 63
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#16 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 7
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The nice thing about being a wireless subscriber in Canada is that Bell and Telus, the two main competitors of Rogers, will be implementing their own HSPA network within the next 2 years. Which means, we'll be able to take our iPhones and hop over to another carrier if we're unhappy with Rogers' prices.
Then again, I'm pretty happy with what I have now. I'm on the $17.50 EPP, with $30/6GB data plan. Can't complain! |
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#17 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 1,415
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Well the plan they offer first time iPhone customers is a horrific value compared to what they offer their existing customers, so you sorta have to "cheat" before you even walk in the door to get the good deal. They also move "standard" items like caller ID into "value packs" so you have to pay at least five or ten bucks a month more than you actually want or need.
Even then, the best deal they offer is $30 for 6GB of data, which is great if you actually use all that data, but most don't even come close to a single GB. They should at least have a $15 dollar option for half the data. The cheapest price you can get away with is something just over $70 at the moment (including hidden fees and "gotchas"), which is pretty outrageous for a phone for most people. I don't know why some cell company doesn't ever understand that people want to pay one price and forget about it. All the services Rogers (or AT&T for that matter), provide could be priced at a flat $50 (including taxes, fees, "gotchas" etc.) a month and they would still make money hand over fist. |
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#18 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 395
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#19 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Boise, ID among others
Posts: 529
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Wow! 250K in Canada! Considering the fact that there are only about 30 million of our friendly neighbors to the north, and that Rogers is notorious for high prices, bad customer service, and mediocre coverage, I'd say this was a success! Rogers prices have actually gotten much better with the rollout of the iPhone.. Previous to that, they were charging a truly *OUTRAGEOUS* amount for web browsing on smartphones and laptop cards.. literally like one of the highest per MB charges in the world. They are no doubt still expensive, but out of the stratosphere now...
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Also, it depends on the rollout of laptop-iPhone tethering with the different carriers. It is very easy to use 10X the amount of mobile data when you are working on a laptop compared a smartphone. |
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#20 | |||
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 395
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The current "extra special offer" is 8 GB for $80 per month, only available with a 3-year commitment. As of now, $30 per month will only buy you 1GB as part of an a-la-carte smartphone plan. If you cut the data allotment in half (500 MB per month) the price is a whopping $25 per month, so when faced with a choice between them it's a really no-brainer. Add the cheapest possible postpaid monthly voice plan ($20 per month for 200 weekday minutes, unlimited nights and weekends), for which you have to pay a one-time subsidy penalty at the time you buy the iPhone), the Caller ID ($7 per month), the System Access Fee ($6.95 per month), the 911 fee (between 50¢ and 93¢ depending which province you live in) and you'll be paying between $65 (1 GB) and $35 (no data) per month, before taxes. If you opt for one of the iPhone special combos, you get the added benefit of visual voicemail, and you have the option of: -$60 per month for 1 GB of data and 250 minutes of weekday talk time, unlimited evenings and weekends. That really works out to a minimum of $75 per month, before taxes, if you factor in the system access fee and the minimum possible price for caller ID. -$75 per month for 2 GB of data and 400 minutes of weekday talk time, unlimited evenings and weekends. That really works out to a minimum of $90 per month, before taxes, if you factor in the system access fee and the minimum price for caller ID. Depending on the province you live in, taxes will tack a minimum of an additional 5% to 15% onto all the numbers above. |
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#21 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,218
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O/w, please stop with the useless bombast. |
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#22 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: Somewhere far, far away
Posts: 2,858
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I suppose you can call me an insider because I don't listen to the media or analysts and advisors. |
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#23 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,218
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#24 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: Somewhere far, far away
Posts: 2,858
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Money is of no consequence when your goals are non-materialistic. |
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#25 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Montreal, Canada
Posts: 664
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Contract too long
I have a Mac and an iPod touch and a basic Motorola cell phone with Telus, a CDMA service provider.
All my contacts are synced from my Mac AddressBook to my iTouch, as well as other info. Seeing as my data is very Mac-centric, I should be the perfect candidate for Rogers and an iPhone, right? Wrong! While the data plan looks reasonable for a North American cell phone provider, the sticking point for me is the length of the contract. 3 years is *way* too long for me. 1 year, maybe. 2 years would be really stretching it. But 3 years in an unacceptably long commitment. So once new GSM providers start doing business in Canada thanks to the recent wireless spectrum auction, I'm going to be stuck with 1 year left on my Rogers contract. As it stands, I have no contract with my current provider, so I can jump ship as soon as a GSM competitor shows up in Canada with more reasonable terms. After all, Rogers did not technically get an exclusive iPhone deal with Apple. |
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#26 | |||
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 77
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Telus has EVDO / 1x towers in the area (therefore could add HSPA radios to them) . Quote:
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I agree 3 years is too long...which is probably why the iPhone 2G market is still booming. |
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#27 | |||
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Toronto
Posts: 1,564
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Apple Gear: Mini G4, Pro 2.66, MacBook(Alu)
iPhone 3G, Nano 4th Gen, Classic 120GB Quote:
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#28 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,066
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Quote:
What the hell are you talking about? Rogers is notorious for high prices, bad customer service, and mediocre coverage Prove it. I bet I get faster speed than you do and I don't get charged for text messages sent to me. Oh, you don't have an iPhone do you? I love vast generalizations... "Nobody needs more than 640K of RAM" Obvious you do, considering that you use them consistently. And where did the 640k come from? |
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#29 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Posts: 1,909
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Rogers did everything they could to make the iphone fail in Canada . Only after the massive backlash over their insane pricing did they introduce reasonable data plans and let existing customer keep their existing voice plans. Rogers can really take no credit at all for the success of the iPhone here. They have proven this by recently chopping the commissions to their sales staff, as they realized the iPhone sold itself.
I still can't believe that there were people daft enough to think the original Rogers iPhone plans were reasonable. |
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#30 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,066
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Quote:
What is the difference between the original and the launch plan? Interesting that those of us that have an iPhone are not using more than an average 200 MBs of data in a month. My Xtreme Speedtest shows 5,296 Kbs/s via Wi-Fi and a low 2,180 via 3G. Getting better all the time. |
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#31 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Posts: 1,909
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You yourself are all the proof I need. In one of the original threads on Rogers and the iPhone you were defending the original iPhone plans from Rogers as reasonable and more than any user would ever need. Yet you opted for the last minute corrective plan that Rogers introduced. Nothing like backtracking. You might be averaging 200MB per month, but if you had gone with the original iPhone plans (the ones announced and at launch were the same) then the one month you went over your average, you would have been in for a world of hurt in overages. There were no differences between the originally announced iPhone plans and the plans available at launch. There was a difference in policy, where Rogers introduced, days before launch, the optional $30/6GB plan that existing users could keep their existing plans (or new plans). Further, a month after launch they added the $100 cap on data plans. All of these are because even then realized their plans were crap, even if you cannot see this. Again, even Rogers recognized these plans were for fools and no longer offers them, though it took them a couple months to scrap them. As more and more apps are released that chew through data, more and more people will use more data. Just because you don't does not make you representative. If Rogers had not become flexible with their plans just before the launch, I would have been paying $90/month before taxes and SAF for the services and feature I have now. Because of their change of heart I pay $56. Again, the original iPhone plans (announced and at launch) were for fools. Even you opted for the better options after defending the original options. |
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#32 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,066
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I took the revised plan for the simple reason why not take a gift horse in the mouth. My $56 plan on July 11, buys me high speed that so far nobody else is delivering, I have more that enough reserve to download any data that i have to, my evenings start at 6 PM, and for the first time, I can make calls that are clear and audible. What I suggest that most of the visitors to these sites don't have an iPhone, so I guess the question is mute. P.S. Do you understand what the word difference means? |
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#33 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Posts: 1,909
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Also, I mentioned I have consistently hit 500MB per month with my iPhone. Reading comprehension is a great thing. Also, as I have said, if I had signed up for the original iPhone plans, I would either have much fewer features than I had and had massive overages or would have been paying $90/month (>$100 with SAF and taxes-insane). You would have been in the same boat. Quote:
Defend your back tracking all you like, you claimed the original plans were all anyone would ever need. Yet you could not bring yourself to take them when something better was offered. Hypocrisy is a great thing when displayed so obviously. You, in this thread claim claim nobody declares usage higher than 100MB, but mention that you yourself use 200MB. You continually say no one that is using an iPhone is going over 100 or 200 MB, but I have already told you I have and in a previous thread linked to other sites where some users also said they were going over that. Inconsistency and selective parsing must be great too. Rogers own statement, 4 weeks after the launch, said the vast majority (91%) of users were averaging less that 200MB, but this left a significant minority that was using more than this. And any reasonable person would realize that as more data intensive apps get released and more users become familiar with what their phones are capable of, their usage will go up. Enjoy you 6GB/$30. It was a good deal and you would have been a fool not to take it. Thanks for proving my points. |
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#34 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,066
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Why should I have to pay more just to satisfy the "significant minority that was using more than this?" Why would I want to pay 50% more than I need realizing that the average iPhone customer is paying nearly $100US a month for their service. Just what data intensive apps are you talking about? Do you realize that you can basically use only one app at a time and as Apple has mandated, data intensive apps won't be allowed. And as everybody else realizes that Wi-Fi is significantly faster and it is free. Just why wouldn't any reasonable person take advantage of it? |
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#35 | |||
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 100
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1) purchase a data plan 2) purchase a voice plan that is $30 a month or more This was explained to me, in depth, by two different Rogers account managers. If you want to break either of these criterion after the fact there's a $50 dollar penalty. Quote:
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Maury |
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#36 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 100
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These sales numbers are terrible. Sales in the US were 3 million on the first weekend, and another 2 or 3 since then. There is over 10% of the US population in Canada, so if we just baseline that, we should have had at least half a million sold.
Maury |
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#37 | |||||
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Posts: 1,909
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Um...any music service is data intensive. Quote:
Apple has not mandated any such thing. If they had, you wouldn't have music services. You wouldn't even have Mail or Safari as those can be data intensive. Maps with GPS, Facebook photo browsing, YouTube. All data intensive. Maybe you are talking about tethering? Yes, Apple appears to have blocked tethering apps. But, since Rogers allows tethering, any jailbroken phone can tether just fine and chew through even more data. Quote:
When I take my son out for a walk and want to have music for the walk, I will just stream my music from my Mac or from one of the internet radio stations. This uses lot of data. When I am out or town and need to pull over to use the GPS , this can use a fair amount of data. When I am out of the house and large emails come in, this can use a lot of data. I use Wifi whenever possible. However, because I do not chain myself to my house and office, there are lots of times where using data means using 3G (when Rogers is not having more network issues) |
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#38 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2002
Posts: 277
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#39 | |||||
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2002
Posts: 277
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#40 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2002
Posts: 277
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That I agree with. But does anyone think unlimited wireless Internet should be cheaper than your home Internet connection? Rogers sells a computer wireless solution separately from their cell phones for $45/month for 30GB. Seems reasonable to me.
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