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If music be the food of love... play on.
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-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Kelly Pierce
Sent: Sunday, December 23, 2012 4:19 AM
To: viphone
Subject: My New IPhone 5

On Friday evening after work, I became a proud owner of an iPhone 5,
finally joining generation tech in living the ultra-connected,
information rich digital lifestyle.  I bought a 32 Gb version at
Apple's North Michigan Avenue store here in Chicago.  The store was a
controlled chaos of hundreds of people, most of them swirling around
the open floor plan to soak up the Apple vibrancy and catch the buzz.
It is hard to get noticed by Apple sales staff, who struggle to decide
who is a tourist and who is an actual shopper wanting to buy
something. For sighted people, all the Apple employees are wearing
bright red shirts.    I eventually was connected to a saleswoman.
Once I purchased my phone, she brought me to a second floor area where
she introduced me to a trainer named Russell. To my amazement, Russell
helped me with unboxing the phone for the first time and then provided
a 45 minute tutorial on the phone's physical elements, accessibility
settings, initial set up, and he showed me how to perform the basic
gestures to use the phone.  He showed me how to insert a nanno sim
card and at one point he attached an audio splitter to the headphone
jack and we both listened to voiceover through headphones so I could
hear the demonstration and successfully learn the phone's basic
gestures while Russell offered iPhone coaching and feedback. He was
patient, thorough, and totally knowledgeable about voiceOver for the
blind and understanding how helpful it is to our independence.

After buying my IPhone and receiving an iPhone tutorial, I then went
to a T-Mobile store a couple of blocks away to sign up for service.
The monthly unlimited data and texting plan I wanted with 100 minutes
of voice for $30 wasn't available in stores, only online. Signing up
for service online was useless without a nanno SIM card to run the
phone. The store had these, but I needed to buy a plan that they sell.
 I was now between a useless store and a useless website. What to do?
Brian at the T-Mobile store suggested I buy a daily plan and switch it
over when I got home.  He gave me the address of a website I could
visit for the switch.  Brian said the money on this plan could be
ported to the other plan.  Brian installed the nanno SIM into the
iPhone and entered the many settings into the device. He was tapping
the screen for at least five minutes entering data. Once home, I tried
logging onto the website an was completely unsuccessful.  I called
customer service and learned that new customers are put on ice for two
days and have no website access during this time. I told another
T-Mobile representative why I wanted to log on so soon: so I can
change services to one more affordable. At first, the representative
contemplated the silly idea of referring me to a website I could not
access to change my account. He then placed me on hold to check into
the problem. When he came back, he had switched me to the affordable
plan I wanted. I was so relieved and happy. Now that I was switched
over, I provided my credit card again to pay the difference between
the $10 in daily credit I bought at the store and my new monthly plan.

The T-Mobile fiasco ended Saturday morning when I rose to find my paid
for service cancelled for lack of payment, which I had paid the night
before.  Another day and another call to T-Mobile speaking to a
representative on the other side of the world. He successfully
diagnosed the problem: my account was short $2 from a charge from the
daily plan that I never wanted in the first place. In a very graceful
gesture, he offered to credit my account for $2 and restore my service
to the monthly plan, which took effect a couple of hours later.

T-Mobile is quickly getting its act together in supporting the iPhone.
The $30 a month plan is super affordable, compared to triple the price
for AT&T service.  A week and a half ago, super-fast 3G service
compatible with the iPhone was turned on in Chicago and other major
American cities. Every issue in getting my iPhone up and running on
the company's network was greeted by staff with innovative can do
solutions that enabled me increasingly greater use of my iPhone.  Now,
I am set up permanently with T-Mobile.

After putting my life savings into a brokerage account for a juicy
Apple gift card, I was able to ultimately afford the phone of my
dreams by finding an affordable rate plan one-third of the cost of
that offered by other carriers. I have been using the phone with full
cell service for less than a day and the access is incredible.  I
fully appreciate the tremendous independence that people say it
offers.

Kelly

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