I'm not a customer either, I wouldn't pay my cellular carrier for the
privilege of mapping how bad their network is.  It's not about politician or
technologist, it's about being a shill or apologist.  I'm neither...I'm a
customer, I pay for a service.  I'm glad the network I'm on doesn't have
such horrid service that they needed to build such an app for their
smartphones.  Maybe if they put money into network improvements instead of
lawyers to whine about verizon spreading the truth, their customers might be
happier.

AT&T, we aren't happy, till you aren't happy...and now we have an app for
that too.

On Sat, Dec 12, 2009 at 5:42 PM, tjpa <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Dec 12, 2009, at 6:38 PM, mike wrote:
>
>> Well the funniest part is now the app for that, is an ATT app that after
>> you've been dropped lets you notify ATT...that you've been dropped.  So,
>> they dump resources into having their customers do R&D for them about the
>> quality of their network.  Maybe for each time you send in the info, you
>> get
>> a credit for doing so.
>>
>
> This comment reveals that you are a politician, not a technologist. Three
> cheers to AT&T for cooking up a simple and effective method for mapping
> network problems.
>
>
>
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