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I need a cell phone

Timmy2021
Great Citizen / Super Citoyen

I don't have a cell phone, can someone suggest a cheap cell phone that will be compatible to Public Mobile's service?  Preferably one with a headphone jack.  Thanks. 

61 REPLIES 61

@HALIMACS 

I'm sure they did if I could find it?

I think they liked my reply,  @darlicious 

 

😁

@Luddite 

I agree the OP pretty much ignored all the advice given.


@darlicious wrote:

@Luddite 

Hmmmm....well I can tell you the solution for the OP was eBay. I don't think anyone actually suggested it as a source so.....a self solution?


@darlicious  OP can make change if they wish. eBay/kijiji etc. are poor choices for acquiring a phone scam free.


>>> ALERT: I am not a CSA. Je ne suis pas un Agent du soutien à la clientèle.

@Luddite 

Hmmmm....well I can tell you the solution for the OP was eBay. I don't think anyone actually suggested it as a source so.....a self solution?

.. and A10 is at the tail end of the update scope.. still getting it.. but just biannual.  so, it means it will be dropped of the update list soon.

 

@softech 

My bad…got missed up with the old Samsung A10. LoL

@Timmy2021 

Disregard my comment about the security update!

@BKNS27   don't scare @Timmy2021 ,  A01 still getting security update..   It should have it for at least anther year.  It is getting quarterly updates now.

 

Security Updates Scope | Samsung Mobile Security

@Timmy2021 

I am surprised you bought 2 Samsung A01.

These are discontinued models and there are no security updates for them.

It would have be better for you to get a brand spanking new Samsung A11 with a factory warranty and current updates!

darlicious
Mayor / Maire

@Timmy2021 

Canadian Cell Supplies is a retail partner and as the description provided by @softech and expanded upon by @BlueB is a reliable source for discounted sim cards, vouchers (occasionally) and activation bundles. Most retailers only offer pm products at regular price but may offer free sim cards with an in store activation.

 

I have bought all of their pm products at some point over the last year or so and can attest to their reliability and enthusiasm to sell pm to the general public and they regularly promote pm with their own flash sales of activation promotions.

BlueB
Deputy Mayor / Adjoint au Maire

@softech wrote:

@Timmy2021    CCS is a different company.. they are a reseller for Public Mobile

 

I thought I'd highlight @softech's reply because it answers the OP's question about CCS.  If @Timmy2021 needs any more clarification...

 

Public Mobile is owned by Telus.  Canadian Cell Supplies (sometimes referred to as "CCS") is not related to Public Mobile, but is a separate business that resells products and services, including for Public Mobile.  CCS is known on these forums as a reliable and reputable business and is one reason why they are referred to often in this forum.

 

Purchasing a SIM card online directly from Public Mobile has been known to take 3-4 weeks before it's delivered and usually costs $10.  Purchasing a SIM card from CCS has been known to be delivered much faster and often is cheaper - often $5 or less, and "free" as part of one of their Activation packages.

 

Public Mobile has no "direct" retail locations or presence.  They are online, and their products/services are resold and available through retailers and outlets such as various ones you'll find at the mall, including London Drugs stores and Koodo kiosks.  Beware of buying a SIM card from Walmart as they're known to pressure people to activate on-the-spot when there may be other (possibly better) avenues for activating, such as receiving website promotional offers.

 

Hopefully this helps @Timmy2021 understand the available options a little better, regardless of the technicalities of the English language.


@Timmy2021 wrote:

@darlicious

I am confused, is Canadian Cell Supplies a different company or the same company as Public Mobile, certainly I'll pick the $25 plan.

 

Why this forum postings displays only 5-page while the number of postings have exceeded 5 pages?


 

@Timmy2021    CCS is a different company.. they are a reseller for Public Mobile

 

**the physical location you go and pickup the SIM card is a store.  But the CCS itself is a company  (by definition,   a company is a  commercial business )  🙂

 

Anonymous
Not applicable

@Anonymous wrote:

 

the Canadian Cell Supplies is a retail store not company 


 @Anonymous : How is a retail store not a company?

Edit: @Timmy2021 : Public Mobile (Telus) does not own CCS.

Anonymous
Not applicable

@Timmy2021 

you can get a Bonus 5GB (One time) on plans $25 + FREE SIM

visit Here , buy it plan from that store and getting Free SIM card..

 

the Canadian Cell Supplies is a retail store not company 

Timmy2021
Great Citizen / Super Citoyen

@darlicious

I am confused, is Canadian Cell Supplies a different company or the same company as Public Mobile, certainly I'll pick the $25 plan.

 

Why this forum postings displays only 5-page while the number of postings have exceeded 5 pages?

@Timmy2021 

Well lucky for you are located in Mississauga where Canadian Cell Supplies has a pick up location.* The following suggestion is the best deal out on the market for your needs.....I assume since you will be a low usage customer you are considering the $15 plan.

 

Great plan....one of my accounts has that plan. If needed you add the $5/500 min add on to supplement the 100 outgoing minutes. I have had that add on rolling over every 30 days since December 2019. I still have about 75 minutes left on it. I will have easily made it last 24 or 25 months adding on average $0.20 per 30 day cycle.

 

Canadian Cell Supplies offers activation bundles a discounted first month and a free sim card. I recommend you purchase for your first month the $25 plan. With the 20% discount and the free sim card it will cost $20+tax (×13%=$2.60)=$22.60. By choosing the $25 plan for your first month you are eligible to recieve the one time 5gb bonus data add on (value=$75).

 

The terms and conditions of this promotion do state if you change your plan you will lose the add on.....but we have found that 99% of the time despite changing plans you in fact end up keeping the add on. This is YMMV so you must decide if you want to test your luck and risk losing it by scheduling a change plan on next renewal to the $15 plan. I personally have done this twice and kept my bonus data add ons .....and so have many others. The choice is yours to make though.

 

To summarize....by choosing to activate with CCS their $25 plan activation bundle you will pay $22.60 and recieve a free sim card, the $25 plan and the 5gb bonus data add on. Add a referral code** to recieve the $10 bonus referral credit and register after activation a card for autopay to earn the $2 autopay reward and plan data bonus of 500mb for the $25 plan and when and if you switch to the $15 plan the 250mb autopay data bonus.

 

Schedule the plan change on next renewal and you will pay $3 for your second month after you recieve the $10 bonus referral credit and the $2 autopay reward as a $12 credit in your balance ($2 autopay is applied to your balance upon renewal.) Your third month will be $13 ($15-$2=$13).

 

*CCS has a pick up location in Mississauga for your SIM card that you can either have them preactivate once you pay or pick it up unactivated and activate with them afterwards thru email.

 

**If you don't have a referral code just private message another community member and ask them for their referral code. They will be happy to oblige. Unsolicited referral codes are against the ToS of the community (FYI).

 

Edit:

https://canadiancellsupplies.com/collections/saving-plans/products/free-sim-card-with-public-mobile-...

@Timmy2021 You can buy a sim from a store. Use the store finder at https://www.publicmobile.ca/en/on/store-locator 

Timmy2021
Great Citizen / Super Citoyen

Finally I found Samsung Galaxy A01 in eBay at $122, bought two.  Since I live in Toronto, can I come to pick up the SIM?  

@Quigley 

The camera in a phone is a deal breaker for me....I thought my choice of the moto g7+ ( US$119) was an excellent one until I started to notice I was unhappy with the results of anything not in full daylight I got excited when I saw the bargain basement price of both the pixel 2 and 2xl along with the 3 and 3xl and managed to snag the pixel 3 for US$129 and oh boy am I happy with it!

 

You might want to check out my more recent photos in the Lounge threads... "Sunset to Sunrise", "What's for dinner?" and  "Phone_Camera,_Action!" especially since it compares the samsung A320, moto g7+ and the google pixel 3 and later by suggestion my fujifilm S1600.

 

https://productioncommunity.publicmobile.ca/t5/The-Lounge/Phone-Camera-Action/td-p/704544

 

Oh and did you mean this blue moon......

PXL_20210821_074218641.NIGHT.jpg

@darlicious  Exactly, I thought I'd give the Pixel a try cus I've had my eye on it for a while and I like shopping at B and H.  

I hope you got a great picture of the BLUE MOON 🌘, this weekend!  Here in south western Ontario it looks awesome 😎. I'll probably see it again tonight.

@Quigley 

Or like me.....my new camera!

PXL_20210815_132253707.NIGHT.jpg

ChuckYeah
Mayor / Maire

Look into Umidigi on Amazon.ca. I've had 3 of them now and they all have been great. Most recently, I purchased the A11. Great battery life 36 hours at 80% brightness and lots of ram and storage space. If price is your #1 hot button, they go down to the $150 area with less features.

@Timmy2021 

You're comparing apples and oranges.

@darlicious  I agree with you totally honey but Timmy won't go for it. BTW I'm getting the Google for myself as  a backup to my backup to my backup phone. 

Timmy2021
Great Citizen / Super Citoyen

New phones are prices at $500 or more while used phones have uncertainties. If I can unlock that Samsung Galaxy A01, the problem will be solved. With Public Mobile's cheap monthly fee, certainly the community members will wish this carrier will lock all our cell phones for good, with such low monthly fee, no one will want to leave PM anyway. 

 

 

Surely it is a dog-eat-dog world, there ought to be an unified standard in the mobile industry.


Why cell phone is locked and how to Unlock it so you can bring It to a new carrier


Most cell phones sold in North America, specially on contract are “locked” to a particular cellular carrier. You can only use them on that carrier’s network, so you can’t switch to another carrier without “unlocking” the phone first.

 

Phone locking applies to nearly any type of cell phone, from the lowest, cheapest dumb phone to the highest end smartphone. Unlocking is different from jailbreaking and rooting, which bypass other software restrictions on mobile devices.


Unlocking Won’t Make Phones Completely Portable

 

First, it’s important to bear in mind that phones won’t always be capable of working on another carrier even after they’re unlocked. For example, in the USA, AT&T and T-Mobile use the GSM wireless standard, while Verizon and Sprint use the CDMA wireless standard. These are incompatible with each other, which means that you can’t unlock a CDMA phone purchased on Verizon and take it to AT&T’s GSM network, or vice versa.

 

CDMA is also a more restrictive type of network—while you can unlock an AT&T phone and take it to T-Mobile, you can’t unlock a Verizon phone and take it to Sprint, as Sprint’s CDMA network will reject the phone.

 

Luckily, most of the world has chosen the less-restrictive GSM standard. Before you consider unlocking a phone and taking it to another carrier, ensure that your phone will actually be capable of functioning on that carrier’s network.

 

The CDMA/GSM difference is a legitimate technical barrier to moving phones between carriers. However, there are also artificial barriers. Carriers “lock” phones to make them only function on that carrier’s network.

 

For example, let’s say you walk into AT&T and pick up any smartphone on contract. That phone then functions on AT&T’s network, but if you try to place a T-Mobile SIM card into the phone and switch to T-Mobile’s network, the phone will reject the T-Mobile SIM card. There’s no legitimate technical reason for this—it’s compatible—but the AT&T phone is “locked” to AT&T’s network and only accepts AT&T SIM cards.

 

This artificial locking would also get in your way if you were travelling and wanted to use a local carrier in the country you were visiting rather than paying expensive roaming fees. Your locked phone would reject anything but an AT&T SIM card.


Why Are Phones Locked?

 

Cellular carriers argue that phone locking is a necessary part of their business. By locking phones they sell on contract, they’re able to keep customers on their network so they’ll continue paying their monthly bills. Remember, phones aren’t actually worth their on-contract prices—they’re subsidized. No phone is actually “free” and the latest iPhone actually costs more than $199, so the carrier needs to recover the cost of the on-contract phone over the lifetime of the contract. If consumers were able to take their phones to other networks, carriers argue that they would have difficulty recovering the price of the phone and their business model would take a hit.

 

In reality, this is a fairly silly argument. If you buy a phone on contract, you’re signing a two-year contract. If you want to take that phone to another carrier, you’d have to break your contract and pay an early termination fee or keep paying the monthly bill for the lifetime of the contract. This contractual obligation would still be binding even if the phone itself was sold unlocked and you took it to another carrier. Some smartphones may even be sold locked if you buy them from a carrier store at full price, without signing a contract, which shows how silly this argument is.


8 Ways Your Wireless Carrier is Gouging You

 

Cell phone locking is really just a way to create additional friction for average people switching carriers, encouraging them to stick with their current carrier instead of looking around for a better price. It’s one of the many horrible business practices carriers employ to gouge their customers.


Unlocking Your Phone

 

So you want to unlock your phone. Maybe your contract has expired and you want to switch to another carrier, maybe you’re visiting another country, or maybe you just want to pay an early termination fee and get out of your contract early.

 

There are several ways to unlock a phone:

 

Call and Ask Nicely: Call your carrier and ask nicely—if your contract has expired, most carriers (in the US, at least) will unlock your phone for you as long as you’ve paid off anything you owe on the phone. If you tell your carrier you’ll be travelling and want to use a SIM card from another country to save on roaming fees, they may also be willing to unlock your phone. They may charge a fee, but it’s worth a shot.

 

What Is the DCMA, and Why Does It Take Down Web Pages?

 

Unlock It Yourself: In the past, unlocking a cell phone without permission was illegal in the USA, thanks to the Digital Millenium Copyright Act. Fortunately, that has changed. Cell phone unlocking is now legal in the US. However, if you live in another country or are willing to be a rebel and flout a law everyone agrees should be changed, you can often unlock phones on your own without anyone’s permission. The exact process varies from phone to phone, so you’ll have to perform a web search and find instructions for your specific mobile phone.

 

Of course, not all phones are sold locked. Often, phones sold directly from the manufacturer instead of by a carrier come unlocked. You’ll generally have to pay full price to get an unlocked phone that you can move between carrier networks, as there’s no carrier to subsidize the phone’s full cost.

 

@Quigley 

I agree you can get a decent ZTE, Skye, Alcatel or Blu cell phone for about $100 w/tax that will function as a basic smartphone for a couple of years. I'm just saying that you can get a Lada for $100 or a Lamborghini for $200 you just might want to double your budget for your purchase.

@Timmy2021 

The US and Canada have very different governing agencies when it comes to the mobile industry. All mobile phones after December 2017 must be sold unlocked in Canada as mandated by the WCC. However you could find some phones sold thru mid 2018 can still be locked by the provider. In particular Rogers and Bell tend to have a habit of telling their departing customers that their phones are unlocked when in fact they are not.....then give them a hassle to get the unlocking code despite the WCC mandate stating it should be done upon request for free. US providers are free to continue to sell carrier locked phones.

@darlicious  At Best Buy Canada there are decent ZTE smartphones under $100  new. Perfect for what @Timmy2021  wants.  Any cheaper than those and your looking at cr*p. Take a gander.   Some are supplied by Best Buy and some from Canadian Computer Supply Company or something like that.

Anonymous
Not applicable

 @Timmy2021 : London Drugs has some Sky phones available online. I agree with the old-school typing. But it was amazing to see people ripping out replies with those back in the day. But if you aren't very high usage then maybe for those odd texts it would be fine to tap out some short messages.

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