Thanks for perpetuating the stereotype

LightninInside

Redshirt
Apr 1, 2008
695
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http://www.sltrib.com/slt...ellphone-states.html.csp

About 35 percent of adults in Arkansas and Mississippi have cellphones and lack traditional wired telephones, according to estimates released Wednesday by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Utah, which was at 16.8 percent in 2007, is at 24.4 percent wireless-only today. In New Jersey and Rhode Island, that figure is only 13 percent.

"The answer’s obvious. No one has money here," said John Daigle, a professor of electrical engineering at the University of Mississippi who has had broad experience in the telecommunications industry. "If they can do without a landline, they’ll do it to save money."
That matches the conclusion of Stephen Blumberg, a senior CDC scientist and an author of the survey. Over the years, Blumberg has found that lower-income people are likelier than the better off to only have a cellphone. Younger people and renters are also among the quickest to shed traditional landlines and use only wireless phones.
 

LightninInside

Redshirt
Apr 1, 2008
695
0
0
http://www.sltrib.com/slt...ellphone-states.html.csp

About 35 percent of adults in Arkansas and Mississippi have cellphones and lack traditional wired telephones, according to estimates released Wednesday by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Utah, which was at 16.8 percent in 2007, is at 24.4 percent wireless-only today. In New Jersey and Rhode Island, that figure is only 13 percent.

"The answer’s obvious. No one has money here," said John Daigle, a professor of electrical engineering at the University of Mississippi who has had broad experience in the telecommunications industry. "If they can do without a landline, they’ll do it to save money."
That matches the conclusion of Stephen Blumberg, a senior CDC scientist and an author of the survey. Over the years, Blumberg has found that lower-income people are likelier than the better off to only have a cellphone. Younger people and renters are also among the quickest to shed traditional landlines and use only wireless phones.
 

ckDOG

All-American
Dec 11, 2007
9,825
5,481
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If it didn't require a land line for that one purpose, I wouldn't continue paying for it.

Why does it matter how people transmit their voice whether it be land line, cell network, or voice over IP?
 

Coach34

Redshirt
Jul 20, 2012
20,283
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I may talk to my closest friends once every 3 months on the phone- but talk to some of them by text daily. Text messaging has made the cell phone much more important than the landline
 

Cousin Jeffrey

Redshirt
Feb 20, 2011
754
13
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I have a cell phone. My wife has a cell phone. Why would we need a landline? It would be silly and wasteful to have one.
 

jakldawg

Redshirt
May 1, 2006
4,374
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36
was to improve how public opinion polls are taken? I've always been leery to trust them based on the assumption that they rely solely on the opinions of people who are too dumb to screen their phone calls.
 

olemissbydamn

Redshirt
May 24, 2006
1,479
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ckDOG said:
If it didn't require a land line for that one purpose, I wouldn't continue paying for it.

Why does it matter how people transmit their voice whether it be land line, cell network, or voice over IP?
I built a new house in 2007-2008. I was going to put a landline in for resale purposes, although I had no intention of having a landline phone in the house.

I called AT&T and asked them to come roughin the line from the street to my house and they wanted like $150-200 to put the line in. I asked them why I had to pay for a line that would be used to sell me their service possibly.

Long story short...I went without the landline and bought a security system that runs off of cell phone technology. It actually dials out faster than a landline.
 

dawgstudent

Heisman
Apr 15, 2003
39,308
18,572
113
I know Brinks - it's like $5/month more to not have a landline with a home alarm system. Check with your alarm company.
 

MadDawg.sixpack

Redshirt
May 22, 2006
3,358
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it got to the point that nobody would answer the landline because we all knew it would be a telemarketer call. Or a recorded message from some politician. A total waste of money.
 

WDCDawg

Redshirt
Oct 26, 2010
42
0
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Can't find a pay phone any more because no one carries quarters in their pockets because they are to heavy and give me back problems.

Only reason I have a landline is so we can call family in Europe for free...........and I'm guessing I could get that in a cell phone package but don't think it would be as cheap as Vonage.

If you this was your dissertation, I'm sorry.</p>
 

EAVdog

Redshirt
Aug 10, 2010
2,336
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We did hold on to our landline for longer than we wanted to until our alarm service had wireless technology. I really thought landlines were just a thing of the past?

However there may be some small financial reality associated with it. The phone company keeps pretty good records on late bills and deliquencies and will stop your service. Pre-paid wireless like Boost Mobile or ATT Go-Phones are pretty easy to use on a pay for service basis. But I can't imagine this being some sort of major factor. </p>
 

coach66

Junior
Mar 5, 2009
12,679
289
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our land lines in 1998 and have never missed it. Land lines will soon bea thing of the past.
 

vhdawg

All-Conference
Sep 29, 2004
4,387
1,804
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....and several years ago, this particular Ole Miss engineering professor came to visit us and interview us about the types of things we were doing. The only takeaway that I and my colleagues had after that meeting was that he didn't know ****.

That apparently has not changed.