Cingular-AT&T Wireless Merger Complete 331
bigmase521 writes "PRNNewsWire, Phonescoop.com, and this thread on Howardforums.com, are reporting that the Cingular/AT&T Wireless Merger is now complete. Cingular bought out AT&T Wireless for ~$41B to become the nations largest cellular provider. Details of the merger, and full press coverage, including the audio of this afternoon's conference call can be found here, and Cingular and AT&T customers can see what is/isn't changing for them at newcingular.com."
Should have happened sooner (Score:3, Informative)
So, just like when the TDMA markets were rolling out some years ago, it took a couple years to expand them to remote areas. I suspect fairly uniform GSM coverage throughout remote areas in the near future. Perhaps if Cingular provides better service and lower rates, they might win myself and many others back.
Re:Should have happened sooner (Score:2)
Before that, years before, I had an Alltel phone.
One thing I'm curious about, in the fairly limited time I've had a cell (about 4-5 years total) I've only really had 1 problem. Sometime this summer, it seems my phone was somehow dropped from the network...semi-permanently. Anyhow, I went to the Cingular store and they fixed it quickly, but what I'm curious about is, how many problems (or other experiences...) have you had over the years th
Re:Should have happened sooner (Score:5, Interesting)
I just signed up for a new phone with my carrier, AT&T. I chose a refurbished Nokia phone (a 6820, if it matters). When it arrived, two of the buttons were completely broken and one more was hard to push. This made using the menus (and thus the phone) pretty much impossible. I called in and after a brief discussion, they told me they were going to ship me a replacement phone of the same model (still refurbished).
It arrived the next day. This time, all the buttons worked, but when I tried to access the phone's IM (instant messaging) feature, it popped up a Java error. Now this is when I got a real taste of customer service.
I called them and explained the whole situation (how I just signed up and how the first phone I got was broken so I needed a replacement, and how the replacement was broken too). The guy then put me on hold (the first of many, many holds) while he looked into the situation. When he got back, he started to walk me through the AIM-via-text-message setup procedure, which is something completely different. I explained to him that I don't think he and I were talking about the same thing, and that the first phone I got did not have this Java error. But apparently, that info was all he could find. Apparently, their databases didn't even have an entry for the IM menu on my phone, so he had no idea what I was talking about.
I suggested to him that it seemed to be a software/firmware problem with the phone since the first one didn't have the problem, and I asked him if they could simply ship me another replacement like they did the first time. But he said no, they were all out of stock on that phone (but I just ordered it three days ago...?). After putting me on hold some more, he told me to go to a local AT&T Wireless retail store to "get the phone re-flashed".
So I did. I found an AT&T Wireless retailer, but the lady there had apparently never seen the problem before. When I explained that customer service told me to go and get it re-flashed at her store, she just gave me a blank stare and asked "Reflashed? What's that?". Then we spoke to another guy at the same store, possibly a manager, and he said "Oh, wow... you need some high-tech stuff to do that. USB cables and such. We don't do that here." The lady chimed in, "In fact... none of the AT&T Wireless stores do." Then I asked why Customer Service sent me to them, and they didn't know either.
So when I got home, I called customer service again and explained the whole situation all over again. This time, the technician on the line didn't know what re-flashing was either. He said it was a very strange suggestion for the original tech to have made. Then I asked him whether he could just ship me a replacement. He said no, they were out of stock. Then I told him that they were still available at the webpage, so they did have some phones left, and I asked if he could please check to make sure. He put me on hold for a while to talk to his manager, and when he got back, he told me that they didn't ship replacements out like that. I asked him how I got the first replacement, then, but he couldn't explain it. He did suggest, however, that I can go online and order another phone and they would pricematch it after I was billed. I told him my credit card's limit wasn't that high and so that wasn't an option. Then he just told me to call Warranty Exchange. I just thanked him and gave up for the night.
Annoyed at the entire situation, I ignored it for few more days. I finally called back a few days later. This time, I was sick of explaining everything so I just asked the tech to look at my account notes. She did, and thought about it some. Then, to my surprise, she actually sympathized with the situation and offered to ship me a free replacement phone -- a new one this time, since the past two refurbished ones were both broken. I didn't ask for it; she just offered. I was glad, of course, but then she looked up the phone and foun
Re:Should have happened sooner (Score:2)
On a (somewhat) related note, my purchased (OK, free after instant rebates) NEW Nokia 3588i (Sprint) is losing Menu, 1 and 6 (especially 6 - I have to take the faceplate off to get 6 to work).
Heh (Score:2)
Sis works at an AT&T store with her husband. Both college degrees. I get to hear about some of their more colorful customers now and then... and they make more money than I do
Re:Should have happened sooner (Score:2)
Best thing to do is to obtain an unlocked phone.
I bought an unlocked phone on ebay recently; While on layover in MIA, en route to Curaçao a few weeks ago, I was told by ATTWS that calls to the US from Curaçao would be $1.69/minute.
It wasn't long before I found a
Re:Should have happened sooner (Score:3, Informative)
Greatest thing ever, IMHO. I'm both a Cingular and ATT customer at the moment. (long story short)
I have 3 differnt phones (and rotate like girls rotate through shoes). All my phones are unlocked so it doesn't matter if I pop my cingular SIM into the ATT phone.
Going international? Not a problem with calls (prepaid sim as the parent said).
So, how to unlock?
Firstly, IS IT ILLEGAL? I don't think so. Technically, even if "free", you paid for the phone when you signed the contract.
Re:Should have happened sooner (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Should have happened sooner (Score:3, Interesting)
Couldn't happen soon enough! (Score:3, Insightful)
My advice to Cingular on this buyout (if they'd have it?) Completely stomp all AT&T customer-facing EVERYTHING into irretrievable dust, and replace it with Cingular everything. Every drop of software, to the point of formatting any hard drive infested with any AT&T software or marketing. Drop every stupid, confusing plan, and replace it with an equivalent Cingular plan. Burn every marketing brochure, and hang on to the resumes of any former AT
Re:Couldn't happen soon enough! (Score:2)
Re:Couldn't happen soon enough! (Score:2)
Suncom!? What'll happen to them in Virginia! (Score:2)
Re:Clarification Please (Score:2, Informative)
Network wierdness (Score:3, Informative)
This just happened to me again today, so this merger may be complete business-wise, but there are still bugs to work out of the network.
Re:Network wierdness (Score:2)
Re:Network wierdness (Score:2)
Re:Network wierdness (Score:3, Informative)
Get used to it. Lots of carriers in metro areas are moving to 10-digit dialing. Boston's been that way for years, and I know other big(ish) cities are doing the same thing. Now it's weird for me to see a 7-digit number, because I've gotten so used to the extra three digits.
Re:Network wierdness (Score:2)
That being said, any cellphone I used here (even old analog ones before digital networks were popular) requires/-ed the area code to be dialed.
Re:Network wierdness (Score:2)
I'm in San Diego. Over the summer, when getting a new phone in the AT&T Wireless Store, the salesperson said they were in the process of integrating the networks. Towers were being converted over, and sometimes I would get Cingular, but usually AT&T. I'm in an area with just 1 area code.
Today, my phone was solid Cingular (first time ever) until early afternoon. Now it's AT&T (I've tried turning it off a
Can you say.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Funny thing, back then Ma-Bell was broken down for anti-trust reasons, now all these giants are bigger than what Bell Labs ever was.
And they are all merging. That's a very scary thought.
I think a few years from now, almost all the business will be controlled by just a few corporations.
I personally am not sure if that would be a good idea, that would certainly put smaller companies and businesses out, and these would not stand a chance against the big corporations.
Not too sure how I feel about this.
Re:Can you say.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Can you say.... (Score:2)
Ma-Bell had a monopoly because they were the effectively the first people to establish such a huge network.
No, I'm not talking merely in terms of coverage and areas. I'm in talking in terms of financial power and effectively arm-twisting capabilities.
Look at them - Microsoft, AOL-Time Warner, Cingular-AT&T, etc. They effectively control a large chunk of the media. You must be smoking something if you think that these guys can't squash a small player if they didn't like them.
It's
Re:Can you say.... (Score:2)
By "too many", I didn't mean that it's a bad thing for the consumer -- on the contrary, competition is very good. It's just that it's not a sustainable market situation -- eventually, some of those com
Re:Can you say.... (Score:2)
Re:Can you say....Countersue. (Score:2)
When IBM sues you and sends in a bunch of their very best lawyers, you seldom fight. You or your investors would seldom dare risk open confrontation - they next move would be to move into the boardroom and negotiate.
What did the anti-trust things do to Microsoft? Effectively NOTHING. It killed off Netscape.
Lawyers are expensive, and so are court-room fees. Do you really think that small companies could stand a chance against companies whose p
Re:Can you say....Countersue. (Score:2)
Re:Can you say.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Whew, not even 80%? That's a relief.
There are currently about 4 other companies I can think of that are in the cellphone business.
That many, huh?
That's way too many as it is.
Run 'em all outta business. That'll be great for consumers.
Re:Can you say.... (Score:3, Informative)
Sprint
Verizon
Alltel (they DO have national coverage, anyway)
T-Mobile
US Cellular (I know they exist, but I think there are large areas where you can't buy their phones (where I live, for one). They still work, though - we looked at US Cellular when trying to find a good actual plan (we were on prepaid))
Nextel
Tracfone (does that count, though?)
Virgin Mobile and Boost aren't listed - they are really Sprint and Nextel's prepaid services, and Boost is most definitely not nationwide.
Re:Can you say.... (Score:3, Insightful)
You're right. It WILL be controlled by 'just a few corporations' because it already IS controlled by 'just a few corporations.
There are economic reasons for this. Mainly that being a telecom company is expensive. You must have lines, switching systems, employees, et cetera. Competition is often a good thing, and it's often a bad thing. Some things, like telecos, power/water/propane supply on a local scale
Re:Can you say.... (Score:2)
Come on USA government, slow them down!!!
USA government? you mean the same guys whose pockets are chock full of these corporations' money?
Let me introduce you to the word "naive"...
I for one welcome (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I for one welcome (Score:2)
Re:I for one welcome (Score:2)
For example, I know of a car dealership who would, after about 3-5 years (depending how their used car sales was doing) ask you to trade in your "old" car for a new one at "little or no out of pocket expense". The catch? So they could get you in a new lease/finance and keep you for another 3-5 years.
PAY CASH if you can. It saves alot in finance charges.
Re:I for one welcome (Score:2)
Plain local phone service used to be less than $20 a month, with the added bonus of being able to hear the other person during a call.
It's a 400% price increase, but that's OK!! BRING ON THE MEGACORP!!
Gains (Score:5, Insightful)
http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/oct20
"The Atlanta-based carrier has landed exclusive rights to the new Motorola Razr V3 and the Sony Ericsson se710a. Both are high-end multimedia phones expected to lure sophisticated buyers. The Motorola Razr is a design triumph. It's just a half-inch thick when closed. Open, it's as thin as a Q-Tip. Yet it manages to pack in a VGA camera with 4x zoom, 3D graphics capability, and 22 kilohertz polyphonic speaker technology."
Its merger with AT&T Wireless will give Cingular 47.6 million subscribers, catapulting it past the 41 million customers that current market leader Verizon Wireless has. But that status might not last long unless Cingular can keep subscribers from bolting to Verizon and others. Cingular is plagued by above-average customer defections. [...] its churn rate edged up from 2.7% in the second quarter to 2.8% in the third, while Verizon's is hovering around a more wholesome 1.5%.
Mergers are dangerous : you gain benefits (in this case, exclusive handhelds and a big subscriber base), but can go wrong. Only time will tell if the benefits outweighted the disadvantages in this case.
Pictures of the RZR (Score:2)
Re:Gains (Score:2, Interesting)
Cingular...pretty sweet, but they have dead zones (Score:3, Interesting)
If I have a T-Mobile GSM phone, why do I know about Cingular's network? Because T-Mobile has had colocation rights on Cingular infrastructure on the West Coast since forever, and because I have an unlocked Euro-Phone (Ericsson r520m) the display identifies the actual network I'm on, not the service provider.
The only annoyances are that my apartment is under a dead zone, and at the cur
AT&T's idea of a network (Score:2, Interesting)
I live in a regular brick house (NOT in the basement or with my mom). I get zero-to-no service at all here. I have to walk two blocks down the street to get 1 bar, 4 blocks for two bars, and 5 blocks for full service.
My phone works fine everywhere else, but I swear AT&T hates me or my house. I've had them out to my house three times to check the signal and they always say it's fine. Maybe Cingular has a better network/customer service policy.
Re:AT&T's idea of a network (Score:2)
AT&T coverage sucks:
Re:AT&T's idea of a network (Score:2)
the problems you are having is somewhat due to this.
When GSM was envisioned, there were two operating frequencies, 900Mhz, and 1800Mhz. 900Mhz had greater penetration and covered longer distances, whereas 1800Mhz provided slightly higher capacity in built up places (at the expense of range). Many countries use both bands effectively to minimise the requirements on transmitters and yet pr
Re:AT&T's idea of a network (Score:2)
I think it's because in the US the 900Mhz band was allocated to cordless phones well before GSM came into play.
Re:AT&T's idea of a network (Score:2)
Images from here [orcon.net.nz]
Cingular indeed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cingular indeed (Score:2)
Well, that was convienient.
Re:Cingular indeed (Score:2)
Cinuglar! Darts! oh wait, i'm a cingular customer.
Re:Cingular indeed (Score:2, Interesting)
I WANT IN.. but the bluetooth!?! (Score:3, Interesting)
The merger could mean I will, in New York City, be saturated with reception goodness. Each company on it's own was "ok to good" but overlap the two and Verizon IMO is shaking like the bluetooth criplin' bitch it is.
*hopes and prays*
Re:I WANT IN.. but the bluetooth!?! (Score:2, Informative)
I'm a Cingular subscriber and I recently bought a Sony Ericsson T637, which is bluetooth enabled. I can sync it with my Mac and my bluetooth headset with no problem, as well as connect to other bluetooth phones. I'm not sure how Verizon cripples bluetooth, but from all outward appearances, Cingular does not cripple it all.
Re:I WANT IN.. but the bluetooth!?! (Score:2, Informative)
This one's a Sony-Ericsson T616; its predecessor was a Nokia 3650, "world phone" but unfortunately AT&T "built out" their network in the rural areas around me using a different GSM frequency band than any of the ones supported by that tri-band phone. (It was 900/1800/1900MHz; they had 9
Re:I WANT IN.. but the bluetooth!?! (Score:2)
Re:I WANT IN.. but the bluetooth!?! (Score:2)
Re:I WANT IN.. but the bluetooth!?! (Score:3, Interesting)
You get in the car, and now your Bluetooth-enabled phone is using your car's stereo speakers for audio out, and a dashboard mic for audio in. It mutes the stereo when an incoming call comes in, then sounds the ringer. You can configure it to autoanswer or answer when you press the dashboard "phone" button.
If you press the phone button the stereo mutes itself and the phone goes into voice command dialing mode.
The phone never leaves your pocket, and
AT&T Wireless and Canada calling (Score:5, Interesting)
It used to be an extra $20 a month, then when I switched to GSM, they'd lowered it to $10. Now I think it's only like $7/mo, which is a real bargain. I think it's called their "North America" plan or something, now.
Just a heads up for those who might find such a service useful. I've been asking for a few months now at both ATTWS and Cingular stores whether the new company would offer a similar plan, but no one knew for sure.
Re:AT&T Wireless and Canada calling (Score:2)
Having to work for a company that incredibly short-sighted, stupid and ignorant of their customers must truly make you hate your job. I hope Cingular treats you better, or at least insults your intelligence less. Good luck with the merger.
Ma Bell on the comeback (Score:2)
Bear in mind that this is an SBC (i.e. Southwestern Bell) and BellSouth joint venture buying a former subsidiary of AT&T.
Also bear in mind that the RBOCs have been whittled down by merger to those two, Verizon, and Qwest. How much longer until this becoimes three, or two, or even one, if the feds think that the cell phone companies are the "competition"?
as Lando would say (Score:2)
Nothing's changin (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Nothing's changin (Score:3, Informative)
What's Frustrating for Me (Score:5, Funny)
I just can't win.
Re:What's Frustrating for Me (Score:2, Informative)
Great! (Score:2, Funny)
I'd be rich if I had a nickel every time someone asked me to call them on a real phone when I was using my ATTWS cell phone.. 'You sound like you're in a tin can!'.
Lets hope Cingular can bring something better to their service.
Re:Great! (Score:2)
The biggest change so far (Score:2)
I know reading the article is bad form... (Score:5, Funny)
They had a list of bullet points and then a whole page devoted to how much better my life is going to be after this merger. I swear, there were about 64 kilobytes of text devoted to listing all the positives of this merger.
That's when it struck me that companies really need to read the Cluetrain Manifesto. I really would be interested in the six worst things that are going to happen to me, so that I can be prepared for it.
Take, for example, when I first signed up with AT&T. Plan: $65/month all told. First bill comes. $300. WTF? Everything that could go wrong, did. They put me on the wrong plans. They didn't count my mobile-to-mobile minutes. They signed me up for about 17 extra plans I didn't need or ask for. Not to mention that "Federal fund recovery fee" which is essentially AT&T's way of saying "How come restaurants get to charge you 15% extra for tips, and we don't??? Oh, wait. We do. We'll just charge a tip on every bill. Nice."
Now Cingular is going to take this bumblefuck of a corporation and incorporate it into its everyday operations.
And things are going to go smoothly? I don't think so.
This is Tweedle-dee meets Tweedle-dum, and they're in charge of your critical wireless communications. Be prepared to be pissed off.
Re:I know reading the article is bad form... (Score:5, Insightful)
It most certainly is. Sure the costs are real. WalMart doesn't have $6.65 on the box, only to charge you storage fees, parking fees, retail overhead, "government regulation fees" (they pay money directly to Social Security and other fees directly to governemnts). They figure out the cost, advertise $9.88, charge $9.88 (plus tax, if you are in a taxed location) and pay all the fees without bugging you.
If I were in charge of the FCC (too bad I'm not a general's son), I'd order that all telecom companies include all static (either in $ or %) fees in the advertised price. They shouldn't be allowed to tell you service is $20, then charge you $40 because of all the fees they add in that they blame on the government. It is their cost of business, and the only reason they are separating them out is to be able to advertise or quote lower rates that they are not able to deliver.
Dodging bullets (Score:2)
Wh
Re:Dodging bullets (Score:2)
"'Cause he dodges bullets, Avi!"
AT&T Wireless will re-emerge in the next 6-12 (Score:3, Interesting)
Ah! The confusion!
Ported (Score:2)
Please finish changeover by Oct 31! (Score:2)
Re:Please finish changeover by Oct 31! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Please finish changeover by Oct 31! (Score:3, Insightful)
Guarded optimism (Score:3, Informative)
The thing is, I've been at Verizon for over two years as a refugee from some truly horrible Cingular service. Specifically, I had terrible luck trying to find an optimal place to use my phone, a problem I haven't had at all with Verizon.
I'd love to get a Sony/Ericsson Bluetooth phone, something that Verizon just doesn't offer (their Motorola phones' Bluetooth implementation seems to be gimpy). But without decent reception, well, it wouldn't be much of a user experience. I'm going to be watching what develops here closely. If Cingular gets its act back together with regards to reception, sure, I'll go back.
Re:Guarded optimism (Score:3, Informative)
At last! (Score:2)
Thanks Borg-like telecommunications conglomerations!
I love it when a plan comes together! (Score:3, Interesting)
Rural area coverage (Score:2, Interesting)
Now what would be classified as 'out in the sticks'? Try Cherokee, NC. It's nestled in the Grreat Smoky Mountains, is home to a casino, what I would consider a major tourist c
interesting but inconsequential on personal level (Score:2)
Insider scoop. (Score:5, Interesting)
AWS built out EDGE before Cingular.
AWS has the larger data network with more coverage.
AWS has more RAN hardware than cingular.
AWS launched UMTS, Cingular said they would continue it.
AWS launched global roaming before everyone else.
AWS has the largest wap/mmode content around.
AWS has location based services, wifi, and many other services.
AWS has many of the fortune 500 companies as customers.
AWS Hired an outsourcing VP 2 years ago, they ran IT into the ground, crippled customer support. Customer support use to be live, you could get people to fix your issues, it was going the way of automation and lower paid support centers. Then they started forcing contracts and fucked up billing for customers, no wonder usnet has tons of complaints.
The thing that pissed me off, they ran the company into the ground. Then the CEO's take almost 90 million each, while every employee that bought stock lost money. (Buy at 29, Cingular pays 15)
Our CEO's hired the worst marketing firm in history, fluffy sheep anyone? I wanted to see a damn van fully loaded with RF gear, pull over and leave the "Can you hear me now" guy in dust. We do drive tests all over. Cant hire enough people quick enough to expand the network. (BTS Vendors, thats a post in itself...)
Sad, it was a great company they ran into the ground to make CEO money and split. I started there 6 years ago after the mccaw buyout, been in operations ever since.
Top if off, Cingular has been calling our network substandard to theirs. Who are they joking? I talk to the same freaking vendors...
I'm not even going to post anonymous.
Re:Insider scoop. (Score:2)
The legality of the service message... (Score:2)
I love the service.
I especially love the SIM card type phones.
Cingular/AT&T offer the best technology for phones as far as I can see.
I also like the fact that Apple is in close partnership with Cingular.
I do have one problem though.
I recently had to pay an $850 phone bill due to a Cingular mistake. I kept getting billed for a 000 000 0000 number. They admitted it. I had told them this has been going on for quite a while, but since I have had below plan minute useage (until August)
I use TMobile and... (Score:2)
So I had to ask myself - is T-Mobile any worse than AT&T/Cingular because it seems to be able to piggyback off of it's network, or at least the AT&T part.
A magazine article I read several months bac
For you new ATT customers... (Score:2)
You have now fallen into the black hole of horrible service. You might as well stop using the phone.
ATT wireless is bar none the absolute worst in terms of customer service.
-They flat out lie to you most of the time regarding the contract in the basic T&C and how or if the contract can be changed.
-They give you different answers to the same questions, no one who works there can really give a coherent answer to anything.
-They hide critical details from you lik
Hope Cingular realizes not to fuck over IT (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:1 + 1 = 0 (Score:2)
Where I'm (Atlanta), T-mobile provides quite decent coverage. However, I've observed that when I'm in California T-mobile simply acts up. Horrible, horrible service.
Wonder how Verizon is, though.
Re:1 + 1 = 0 (Score:2)
"Well sir, the network is increidbly busy so you're gong to lose calls like that. Try you call later."
My signal fades from full to nothing at different parts of my apartment. I'm on the 18th (top) floor of an apartment complet j
Re:Biggest in the... (Score:2)
Re:Biggest in the... (Score:3, Informative)
Vodafone.
They're not in the US. About 6 billion people aren't either.
(Note: I *AM* in the US. I use Sprint. Commence mocking!)
Re:Biggest in the... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Biggest in the... (Score:2)
Oh, and I know that the US isn't even close to a large part of the world.... I was just saying they are a pretty large force. I don't think I've really heard of any place but the US having people with multiple phones/pagers, etc (I've seen people who are businessmen or sysadmins with 2-4 cell phones and 1-4 pagers). Seems like a bit of overkill to me, but I could be wrong again.
I also have heard of Vodafone and yes, th
Re:Biggest in the... (Score:2)
Also, in the rest of the world, SMS and other value-added services are big (and big money-spinners). For some reason the US market se
Re:Biggest in the... (Score:2)
To say Vodafone uses W-CDMA is misleading as you are implying they are not a GSM (based on TDMA) company. Vodafone IS a GSM company, based in the UK, and also exisiting in, amongst others, Australia, New Zealand, etc, use GSM (specifically GSM 900) and are slowly introducing 3rd Gen GSM using the WCDMA in UK and other countries.
I think in general, people in the
Re:Biggest in the... (Score:2)
Pagers are almost redundant outside the US - there's only specialised places (such as hospitals, where mobile phones are prohibited) that still use them.
Re:Biggest in the... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm (Score:3, Funny)
who can Tell...
Re:What does AT&T do anymore? (Score:2)
Re:Excellent! (Score:2)
*Lumbergh voice* What's haaaaaaaaappening, Peter?
Re:Cingular already out to make $$$ (Score:2, Insightful)
If I go GSM, I'm definitely going unlocked.