It's funny,

I've had issues with Sprint where I've been living for the last 5 years
(Vienna, VA).  There are definite deadspots in various places.  It's almost
impossible to get a reliable signal at a friend's across town, at our
daughter's preschool, and at another friend's just outside of Vienna near
Merrifield.  In our house the signal was fluctuating between one and two
bars until I finally convinced Sprint to send me an Airave for free,
although we do pay $5/month for the thing.  We'll be moving to Reston in a
few weeks and when I've been in our new house, it's been mostly 4 bars.  I'm
wondering if I now discontinue the Airave service, can I sell the unit, or
will Sprint make me return it since it's so new (about two months old I
think)?


Levi Wallach
tweet me @dvdmon


On Wed, Sep 9, 2009 at 4:50 PM, Harold M. Goldner <[email protected]>wrote:

> Well, for Suburban Philadelphia, and SE PA in general, which has all kinds
> of dead zones for AT&T and Sprint (and is the HG area for Verizon), I
> really
> don't have much of a choice.
>
> When you can't connect it's a brick.  It may be a very pretty brick, but
> it's a brick nonetheless.
>
> Harold
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>


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