http://www.pissedconsumer.com/reviews-by-company/birch-telecom.html
Yes, the merger took place January 31, 2005.
i have no idea, what is the upgrade for the slate?
I don't know? What Do I Look Like To You An Answering Machine?
T-Mobile and ATT usually have great data plans and I'm thinking ATT to be the cheaper of the 2 with unlimited data plans. I heard that boost and virgin mobile are good as well.
The Xenon is the better phone. The new Neon II is similar to the Xenon.
I would look at AT&T website. They should give you options on different phones that are refurbished and are at a cheaper price.
When comparing ATT call service to Verizon's call service, the two come out to costing pretty much the same. ATT offers a couple of phone features that are different from Verizon, but then Verizon offers features ATT doesn't. A savvy consumer should decide which features are more useful and choose the phone service that best serves his/her better.
If you are looking to get information on business phone lines and what options are there available then I would suggest checking out ATT or cox communications as they have fair prices.
AT&T owns: AT&T Alascomm AT&T Communications AT&T Laboritories AT&T Communications owns Comcast, and many, many of the baby-Bells; including SBC Communications. Too many to list. Go to wikipedia for a list. But, they do NOT own T-Mobile (owned by Duetsch Telecomm) or Sprint (who did by Nextel.)
AT&T is pretty reliable i think, they're cheaper than higher end carriers like Verizon wireless, some pros are you get rollover minutes for years, they have a large selection of phones and fast 3g service.
Not yet in the US (nobody really knows when), but outside the US, some T-Mobile subsidiaries do, from what I've read. If you use your iPhone in the US, you can unlock your iPhone using one of several hacking tools, and then T-Mobile will be happy to sign you up, either for phone-only service, or phone and data. It's a little cheaper than ATT, and depending on where you use the iPhone, you might get better (or worse) reception than with ATT.
ATT/Apple started using it first, then Verizon started the "we have a map for that" campaign in which they advertised that their service covered a larger area than ATT's