The wireless communication ecosystem has become pretty complex. With today's society always anticipating the "next big thing" when it comes to technology, there is a vicious cycle in place.
There are two things people tend to overlook when considering how much they pay for wireless service. First - upgrading and maintaining the network infrastructure required to browse sixpackspeak while in rural Mississippi (at reasonable data speeds) requires LOTS of money. The other factor is the cost of all of these shiny new iPhones, Droids, and tablets. Believe it or not, they cost way more than the $100-$200 subsidized price that you pay when making a 2 year commitment for your wireless plan.Verizon now has 4GLTE coverage in Starkville, Columbus, Tupelo, Oxford, greater Jackson, the gulf coast, and it is expanding very rapidly. The 4G coverage will mirror the current 3G footprint by the end of 2013. Verizon spent over $6.5 billion on its network in the US last year.<div>
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Verizon wants to provide a lot of CHOICES of the most advanced devices offered in the USA, and they want these devices to be used on the best network available in the USA. In this evolving data-centric wireless business, Verizon is the first company to make the logical change to shareable data. As a Verizon customer, you now have 2 choices to make: what kind of device(s) do I want? And how much data will I need? Talk and text are now completely unlimited (and unlike CSpire it is truly nationwide). Most companies used to have rate plans with shared minutes, now it's shared data.
3G and 4G mobile hotspot capability is now provided on every capable device at no extra charge. Verizon will not "throttle" your data speeds. If any of you have dealt with that, then you know that can be frustrating. Up to 10 devices can share your monthly data allotment (smartphones, dumb phones, tablets, net books, and "Mifis")</div><div>
</div><div>Also, as a Verizon customer, you are welcome to keep your legacy unlimited data plan when upgrading provided you pay the non-subsidized no contract price for your new device.
I feel that the new plan is being well-received by a substantial majority of Verizon's customers and shareholders. When it comes to wireless companies, Verizon is like the Mercedes-Benz. If you need a Kia then check out Sprint, Cspire, StraightTalk, Cricket, Virgin Mobile etc... I think they still offer unlimited data. This is America. The choice is yours. <div>
</div><div>edited to add paragraphs</div> </div>