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Cell Phones Net10 Samsung T401G

More on the Samsung T401G

I realized I missed some features in my last post. When the keypad is locked you can unlock it in two ways. 1 Hit the buttons indicated. 2 Open the “QWERTY” keyboard. Both options unlock it. I like the second option as it is quicker for me to do that than pressing the buttons.

My wife has noticed an issue for people with long fingernails. the ok button & surrounding direction keys can be hard to get used to, especially if you have never had a phone with that sort of feature.

You can only assign custom ring tones to phone numbers that are not stored on the SIM card. Which isn’t a major issue as you can store up to 1,000 names in this phone. The SIM card can only deal with 200 entries & can only have one phone number per entry.

I’ve seen several pictures that won’t display in the phone. They seem to need to be under 300 KB, but some of the files were not showing up that were smaller than 300 KB. I’m not sure what exactly needs to be done with those files for it to display them. Those pictures were taken on other phones & possibly.

When inserting the SD card into the slot you want to insert it with the printed side facing the keys. That is to say you want to be able to read what is on the card before inserting it, assuming you are looking at the screen side of the phone. In other words the side with the metal contacts should be facing the side the camera is on.

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Cell Phones Glance VX7100 LG Net10 Samsung T401G

My thoughts on the Samsung T401G so far

Yesterday a package arrived with two Samsung T401G phones in it. Both are Net10 phones. I was able to activate them without any major issues other than they only received 10 minutes each when they said on their website at “Getting Started / Activation/Reactivation” in the FAQs. “Q. Will I receive any free minutes for Activating a Net10 phone? A. Yes, when Activating your Net10 phone you will receive 300 free minutes and 60 days of active service.”

Because of that in the FAQs I called them up to talk to support, which I’m afraid was sent to Mexico or they hire people who speak English as a second language with Spanish as their first language. At first they said that the 10 minutes is the way things were, but I pointed them to the FAQ that I just mentioned. After pointing that out they talked to a supervisor, after which they decided that they should see that I get the minutes that I was promised. They had me enter several codes into my phone, but none of them did anything that I could tell. So for both phones she had to add the minutes from their end.

While I was annoyed that I had to talk to them I was glad that they were willing to correct their mistake. So I did give her a nice review when we finished as she fixed the issue that caused me to call up.

On to the phone itself. Sorry but I thought I needed to included the earlier stuff as it does relate to this phone.

  • The phones had the SIM card already installed in the phone. (This was easier than my first Net10 phone as I had to find & install it myself.)
  • The battery was not installed in the phone. (I expected this as there are laws causing this to happen.)
  • They had a paper with the number from the SIM card on it in a font size that you could read.
  • I had to activate the phone online or over the phone. (I activated the first phone online & the second one on the phone. Trust me do it online if you can, unless you speak fluent Spanish that is than you might be just fine on the phone.)
  • Proprietary charging port instead of the common USB connector on most other brands of phones. (I expected this issue as Samsung is known to do this.)
  • The port for headphones & hands free uses the port I just mentioned so you need an adapter if you want to use the port or a device that supports it.
  • It does have Bluetooth. This allows you to use a Bluetooth hands free device as well as send various other items over Bluetooth. Just remember that when you have Bluetooth enabled you are using more battery.
  • It supposed to have approximately 15 days of standby & approximately 5 hours of talk time. (I just got it so I can’t say on that one yet.)
  • It has a mirror just above the lens so that you can have an idea of what your self-portrait will look like. (My wife thought it might be a flash when she pointed it out to me.)
  • It is thicker than my last phone which was the LG Glance. (This is because it has a “QWERTY” keyboard that slides out.)
  • It has a port for a Micro SD card on the side of it, which means you don’t have to remove the battery to access the card. (Since it doesn’t support SDHC you are limited to 2 GB SD cards, which unfortunately the only cards we had were either to large or only 512 MB. So we may have to get new cards at some point.)
  • It is supposed to have a speaker phone, but I haven’t found that yet. (I saw one comment on a blog mention that you had to be in a call to use the speaker phone.)
  • The camera is 1.3 Megapixel with no flash. (If you need a flash get a camera if you are going to use this phone.)
  • Also because it has such a low resolution for the camera I don’t expect it to have decent video output. (I’ve seen complaints about this, but I haven’t tried as I’ve never worried about taking video with a phone.)
  • You only have about 40 MB of internal memory. (So you can’t have all the apps, pictures, & ringtones you want on it without a SD card.)
  • As should be expected if your ringtone is larger than 300 KB you can not use the MP3 as a ringtone. (For me this has been close to 20 seconds, but at higher bit rates it has been shorter.)
  • In the calendar you can set up “Anniversaries”. (I was able to enter my birthday, my wife’s birthday, & the day we were married. What I liked about this is I was able to enter the years for out birthdays, while on my last phone I could only get a recurring event on those days as I couldn’t send the phone back to when I was born.)

That’s all that I can think of so far. If I find anything else out or make a discovery about these phones I’ll make another post.

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Cell Phones Net10 Samsung T401G Verizon

How much do you really pay per minute?

Since I just recently got my phone for Net10 I thought I’d see how they compare as far as price per minute used. Net10 charges 10¢ per minute unless you buy the minutes online then you might get them for less than 10¢ per minute. Net10 also only charges you 5¢ per text message on most phones with the Samsung T401G having a rate of 3¢ per text.

For Verizon Wireless I was paying about 12¢ per minute if you count the 700 minutes I get a month, but because I normally use less than 200 minutes per month the cost per minute actually used is close to 45¢ per minute. Then because I don’t have an unlimited text plan with them they charge me 20¢ per text message, & claim that is competitive. I don’t see how charging 4 times what Net10 would charge me is competitive. I’d think that charging 5¢ per text message or less would be competitive.

So with two phones because my wife is moving to the new plan as well we are going to change from paying about $83 per month to $30 or $45 per month. Yes that is about half of what we used to pay for our phones.

Since I want to be clear on how I did the calculations of cost per minute here it is. For the “12¢ per minute” I took “$84.77” & divided it by 700 (Which is my plans “Monthly allowance minutes”) which resulted in $0.12,11. For the “45¢ per minute” I took “$84.77” & divided it by 188 (Which is the number of minutes used in the billing period) which resulted in $0.45,090,425,531,914,893,617,021,276,595,745.