[citation][nom]jerreece[/nom]Yeah, then you become Cell Phone Company of NY. The rest of the country hates you, because your tiny network in B.F.E. can only handle 3 calls at once, and you lose your foothold everywhere except NY.AT&T admitted (by a huge TV/Marketing campaign) that it's week point is in the rural areas. That's why they did the huge TV commercial campaign claiming to have service in Bozeman, Montana (they specifically mentioned this city). Frankly, I live there and can tell you they did NOT have service in Bozeman, Montana until they bought out Alltell. Very few people here have AT&T phones (except all the former Alltell customers).[/citation]
Why do so many folks on here talk about how it was at&t who bought Alltel??? Seriously, you guys need to get your facts straight before you start rambling on about stuff.
It was Verizon that bought out the whole of Alltel wireless along with almost the entire Alltel customer base. However there was a deal that was struck with at&t to buy certain portions of the company where it had resources that were compatible with at&t and not with Verizon's network. Since the areas were not compatible Verizon's apparently didn't mind letting at&t have them since it only lightened their own bill for the purchase of the whole of Alltel. Most of these places where in some small cities around the US and the vast majority were in South Dakota.
Now with that said, again it was Verizon that bought Alltel and it's customers. That's how Verizon was able to become the #1 carrier in the US. They had the benefit of adding virtually all of Alltel's resources to their own to allow for the increase in usage and since the extra customers they acquired came from that carrier there was no real load increase at the time. In contrast, at&t had a break through product called the iPhone that was released to the public causing a huge surge in customers over the course of a few years and even if they were to double or triple their network capacity each year it still wouldn't compare to the fact that these new customers didn't some with their own complete telecoms resources ready to go.
And to all you iPhone haters out there, at the time of release there was no "real" product around that could truly compare with the functionality with out the added cost of being clumsy, complicated, and difficult to learn how to use it. I know that it was Microsoft that coined the term "smart phone" back when it came out with Windows Mobile for Phones and when they were experimenting with "smart watches" also, but it was obviously geared only towards those that were either adventurous or had a necessity for the functionality. Oh, and at the time Palm-OS was losing and Blackberry was awful, except for email, but then Microsoft started it's push email for Exchange and that was that. So, before you start babbling about how you got Android now, just sit there for a minute and calmly contemplate how many design features, OS navigation methods, and overall usability brought forth by iOS. After this remind yourself that Android is the "newest thing" and that it showed up long after iOS was already dominating. Then before you type, try and form your words carefully so that they are based on reality. Then you will realize what all the hype was about, because you'll see that Android is really just trying to be like iOS with some differences to set it apart.
Oh and seriously tom's, do you always have to post negative things about at&t with the urgent "red" lettering in the link? It's like you think at&t is sending messages straight into your brain telling you to kill your self, or you think the co-founders killed your great great grand pappy or something.