![]() ![]() I’ll be interested to see if I’m on this list or not.įrom the looks of it, the free MicroCells will have to be picked up at AT&T retail locations and you’ll have to agree to stay on with AT&T for an entire year-this is regardless of your current cell phone contract. ![]() Thankfully, it appears that the company will be sending out mailers to “the top 7.5% of 3G wireless customers identified as likely to experience poor in-building coverage at home or in small offices,” offering a free MicroCell device for their (our) trouble. The idea of paying AT&T $200 for a device that uses my own internet connection so I can make phone calls doesn’t really appeal to me, believe it or not. This is in the middle of Boston and happens whether I use my iPhone or any one of the other AT&T phones I’ve amassed over the years. My AT&T phone, for instance, sits in front of a giant window all day long and I watch as the phone’s signal hovers between zero and one bar all day long. Sounds perfect, right? The kicker is that you normally have to buy the thing for $200 (starting this Sunday-it used to cost $150), which seems to just skate along the edges of outrageous if you already get lousy reception. The MicroCell is a little box that plugs into your home internet connection and acts as short-range, personal AT&T cell tower of sorts. ![]() Follow you experience shoddy AT&T reception inside your home or small office, you may be eligible for a free AT&T MicroCell device, according to what appears to be an internal document leaked to Engadget.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |