With so many cellular phones on the market, it becomes a job in and of it itself to decide which one is right for you. Most of us usually decide based on recommendations from a friend or choose the mobile database phone that's the most popular at the time we plan to purchase. With so many tasks that can now be completed by smart-phones, your decision should really be based around this one question: "How can this phone help to improve your life and help you to better manage your time". I'm sure you live a very active lifestyle with plenty of things to do, both work and play. So in this article a plain to give you a little help deciding what cell phone may be right for you. I'm going to endorse any particular phone, but rather point you in the right direction so that make the decision that best fit your lifestyle.
When you start shopping for your new cell phone you probably feel a bit uncomfortable and weary of making the wrong decision. While in no-way I'm I professional writer I do a lot about cell phones and technology in general. Before you start shopping for a cell phone you should create a list of things that you would like this phone to do for you. Whether it's to simply communicate with your friend or you just want to have it on-hand for emergencies. Below I have created a sample list for you:
My cellular phone needs.
1. I need want to eliminate some of my many electronic devices.
2. I'm tired of my phone dropping calls.
3. I want to be able to stay up to date with my Facebook friends.
This is a very short list, just something thing give you an idea of how you can make this decision.
Let's start with number one, "I need to eliminate some of my many electronic devices". You may have more than one device that you carry around on a daily bases. For instance: you may have an Mp3 Player, Digital Camera, Personal Digital Assistant (PDA), and a Flash Drive for work. Purchasing the right cell phone can eliminate all of these devices. To eliminate multiple electronic devices you may want to look into purchasing a smart-phone. A smart-phone has the ability to perform multiply task. Most smart-phones have built-in calendars, task management, reminders, email, cameras, and mp3 players. Smart-phones are designed to make life simpler and to combine multiply devices into one. Smart-phones are essentially a combination of PDA's (which came on the scene in the 90's and eliminate the rolodex) and cell phones.
If you're tired of dropping calls then you may be asking the wrong questions to start with. Most cellular companies advertise things like, "We have the most coverage nationwide", or "The network with the fewest dropped calls", or "We have the fastest network available." All of things are well and good, except for one key point. It's not important to you how good or fast their network is, it's how good or fast it is where you live. A cell phone service provider with excellent nationwide coverage could actually have the worst service in your neighborhood. Pour service will actually limit all aspects of cell phone use including, browsing the web, getting text messages, phone quality, and yes frequency of dropped calls. You should ask your sales rep, "How is the coverage in my neighborhood?" You can also ask a few neighbors how their cell phone reception is. I'm positive some will say it's great while others will say it barely works. You may just want to save yourself some time by going with the cell phone provider of the neighbor with great reception.