What I remember is the good old days (2003, 2004?) when AT&T (before they bought up Cingular) used to give you all of your incoming text messages F-R-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E. I questioned them on this multiple times before signing up again, and they ASSURED ME that this was still the case. They outright lied to me to get me to sign up. Typical sales. When you can't get the customer on your own merits, lie like there's no tomorrow, make promises you won't keep, and make sure you get them to sign the contract. You know, just like the politicians do. :)
Following the commercial success (and technical disappointment) of the original Wildfire -- which featured a miserly 528MHz CPU and QVGA display -- HTC has returned with the Wildfire S.
The most commented posts on Engadget over the past 24 hours.
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
I remember back in 2003 when I first signed up with Verizon they had a $5 unlimited text package. Whatever happened to the good old days?
What I remember is the good old days (2003, 2004?) when AT&T (before they bought up Cingular) used to give you all of your incoming text messages F-R-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E. I questioned them on this multiple times before signing up again, and they ASSURED ME that this was still the case. They outright lied to me to get me to sign up. Typical sales. When you can't get the customer on your own merits, lie like there's no tomorrow, make promises you won't keep, and make sure you get them to sign the contract. You know, just like the politicians do. :)