Turn an Ipod into a Iphone?! - Printable Version +- Board 6 (http://board6.com) +-- Forum: The Good Shit (http://board6.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=34) +--- Forum: General Discussion (http://board6.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=35) +--- Thread: Turn an Ipod into a Iphone?! (/showthread.php?tid=10014) |
Turn an Ipod into a Iphone?! - Insanecowposse - 10-01-2010 theres an app for that Turn an iPod into an iPhone Thereâs some big news about Line2, the iPhone app I reviewed in March. As Iâm sure you remember, I wrote: For a little $1 iPhone app, Line2 sure has the potential to shake up an entire industry. It can save you money. It can make calls where AT&Tâs signal is lousy, like indoors. It can turn an iPod Touch into a full-blown cellphone. And it can ruin the sleep of cellphone executives everywhere. Line2 gives your iPhone a second phone number â a second phone line, complete with its own contacts list, voicemail, and so on. ⦠But thatâs not the best part. The Timesâs technology columnist, David Pogue, keeps you on top of the industry in his free, weekly e-mail newsletter. Sign up | See SampleLine2 also turns the iPhone into a dual-mode phone. That is, it can make and receive calls either using the AT&T airwaves as usual, or â now this is the best part â over the Internet. Any time youâre in a wireless hot spot, Line2 places its calls over Wi-Fi instead of AT&Tâs network. Thatâs a game-changer. Where, after all, is cellphone reception generally the worst? Right â indoors. In your house or your office building, precisely where you have Wi-Fi. Line2 also runs on the iPod Touch. When youâre in a Wi-Fi hot spot, your Touch is now a full-blown cellphone, and you donât owe AT&T a penny. But wait, thereâs more. Turns out Wi-Fi calls donât use up any AT&T minutes. You can talk all day long, without ever worrying about going over your monthly allotment of minutes. Wi-Fi calls are free forever. I calculated that Line2, even at $15 a month, could save you money: If youâre in a Wi-Fi hot spot most of the time (at work, for example), thatâs an awful lot of calling you can do in Wi-Fi â probably enough to downgrade your AT&T plan to one that gives you fewer minutes. If youâre on the 900-minute or unlimited plan ($90 or $100 a month), for example, you might be able to get away with the 450-minute plan ($70). Even with Line2âs fee, youâre saving $5 or $15 a month. Well, now thereâs a new Line2. All kinds of fixes and enhancements are in the new app â you can delete individual Recent Calls entries, incoming calls to your Line2 number ring your iPhone even if Line2 isnât running, and so on. But the big news is the two changes to the value proposition. First, Line2 now costs $10 a month instead of $15. Second, you can now send and receive text messages using your Line2 number. Thatâs very convenient, of course, because it means people donât have to remember to use one number to talk to you, and a different one to send text messages. Itâs also great because you can now do text messages when youâre in a Wi-Fi hot spot but have no AT&T signal indoors. But the best part is how much money you could save. As the company explains it: AT&Tâs unlimited calling plan is $70 [not including the mandatory $30 for Internet service]. Unlimited texting is another $20. So for unlimited calling and texting, you must pay AT&T $90 a month. With Line2, you can drop your AT&T texting plan entirely, and drop your calling plan to the 450-minute plan at $40. So subtract $50 from your AT&T bill, add our new price of $10, and you are saving $40 a month! Itâs pretty persuasive math. You can now send and receive texts using your Line2 number.And hereâs something else persuasive: Line2 turns an iPad or iPod Touch into a Wi-Fi iPhone. If youâre a parent whose child is begging for a first cellphone, this could be a cheap way to grant calling and texting without a two-year AT&T commitment. (Many schools and most colleges these days have campuswide Wi-Fi, and the current iPod Touch has a built-in mike.) Whenever youâre not in a hot spot, calls go to voicemail, and you get e-mail to let you know. Text messages appear as soon as youâre back in a hot spot. You can return the messages and calls at that point. The new texting feature works great; I even tried sending texts to and from my Google Voice number. Text message back-and-forths show up in little cartoon bubbles, exactly as they do in the iPhoneâs own texting app. The one catch: For now, Line2 doesnât do picture and video messages â only text messages. (The company says itâs working on it.) Of course, you can always send photos and videos over AT&Tâs service for the 20-cent à la carte message fee, even if youâve canceled your AT&T texting plan. Overall, the lower fee and the unlimited texting make Line2 even more attractive (and further distinguish it from calling-only programs like Skype; see this comparison). My one worry, in fact, is that this review will swamp the companyâs servers and drag the service down with it, as my first review did. The company, Toktumi, says that this time, itâs ready for the Pogue Effect. âToktumi spent $100,000 in new server equipment. Expanded, better trained support team. More than 100,000 phone numbers available in inventory.â Well, O.K. then. All I know is that Iâve been using Line2 for months, and love the ability to make calls indoors and in other corners of the world where the AT&T signal doesnât reach. But to have that, unlimited texting and $30 or $40 a month off my AT&T bill? Thatâs very persuasive indeed. |