Go Go Gadget sbdot <sbdot@mailandnews.com>:
> -Switch to prepaid and forward your calls. At ten bucks a month,
> consider it semi-expensive voicemail until everyone knows that you've
> changed number or no longer use your cell. Just leave a voice message
> with your new number or use call forwarding to your regular/new number.
My understanding was that you can't keep a plan phone number when
switching to prepaid and vice-versa. Has that changed?
When I moved from Ottawa to Halifax, I called Fido to have my Ottawa
number forward to a new Halifax number, and transfer my (grandfathered)
plan to the new Halifax number. I was told I couldn't transfer a
grandfathered plan to a new number, and that I couldn't move my Ottawa
number from one SIM to my new one. So I called to cancel my service,
and after spending hours and hours on the phone with customer retention
making sure they understood exactly why I was leaving, they were able to
do it.
I've always loved Fido's customer retention. If you take the time to
say "I like the service, but it makes economic sense to quit because..."
-- they accomodate you every time. I'll miss those guys.
> If you don't want to do this, another means of protest is to call and
> cancel a service whenever they jack up the rate for it? 'New' long
> distance rate? Call and ask to have long distance disabled on your
> phone.
http://www.primus.ca/en/residential/longdistance/index.htm - these
"residential" plans will let you add 5 cellphones to the plan. For
$20/mo, you get unlimited Canadian LD, you just have to get your phone
to dial a local Primus number first.

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Rob.Russell@Canada.Com, Unicorn of Usenet & Bastard of Bandwidth
"If my son wants to be a pimp when he grows up, that's fine with me. I
hope he's a good one and enjoys it and doesn't get caught. I'll support
him in this. But if he wants to be a network administrator, he's out of
the house and not part of my family." Steve Wozniak, http://www.woz.org
JF Mezei - 30 Jul 2005 01:08 GMT
> http://www.primus.ca/en/residential/longdistance/index.htm - these
> "residential" plans will let you add 5 cellphones to the plan. For
> $20/mo, you get unlimited Canadian LD, you just have to get your phone
> to dial a local Primus number first.
Unfortunatly, they have a gazillion access numbers depending on where you are.
(as opposed to an 800 number). So if you are travelling between Montreal and
Toronto, making a long distance involves looking up the nearest access number,
hoping it is a local call from where you are currently and then dialing that one.
It is good if you always stay in your home city, so the local access number
never changes. But if you go out of the city and there is no access number,
you are cooked.