Quizzes & Puzzles7 mins ago
Do You Still Have Your Landline Phone
72 Answers
I do as well as us both having mobiles, a lot of my friends have got rid of their landlines but I'm loathe to do this ( dunno why)
Internet goes through a landline , doesn't it?
Internet goes through a landline , doesn't it?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This is exactly the same as my trusted old friend. If it stopped working or I lost it, I would buy one exactly the same.I think I could get the internet on it, but I've never tried.
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You can have free calls with whatsapp and I got rid or my landline years ago, I have a broadband box, it just works from the socket. I found no one was contacting me with the landline as most want to text etc., so now I'm online or whatever all the time,that does not mean I am on the computer but I am reachable from whatever platform my family and friends need me, either using the broadband box or mobile data on my phone, I dunno when I last paid for a phone call. I also realised before I made any call on the landline the tax on it was much higher than the initial call..
Still have landline and use it all the time (calls up to 1 hour are free)as mobile reception in our house is either rubbish or non-existent - I have to go out into the road to receive those annoying one-time security codes from e.g. my bank. I have an ancient Nokia non-smart pay-as-you-go mobile which is only used in an emergency when I'm out.
When mobile 'phones first became popular, it was expensive to call them from a landline, so most people would not be willing to pay extra. The cost of calling a mobile 'phone from a landline is now much cheaper, so most people aren't bothered. That said I have kept our landline and more than that, I still have a plug in 'phone as back up in case of a power cut. No mains power is needed for the plug in type, as the supply comes off the line (70V DC I believe). We have had situations where we have had power cuts and the mobile networks have been down and our cordless 'phone can't be used.
I have just googled broadband only and the landline deals are dearer than the one we have for phone and internet, the mobile network ones are about the same but one or two where it is unclear which basis is involved is actually cheaper (John Lewis). So clearly the UK has now moved into offering ways which foreign countries had developed years ago. What for us has the greatest overall cost impact is the inability to close down (usage and billing) at will whenever we are away, everything (in the UK) is based on continuous billing for a year or more. We travel a lot and we are looking into (reluctantly) abandoning the landline concept altogether in favour of what essentially would be a mobile network based everything which is of a pay-as-you-go type. Internet will then become exclusively WiFi based (which I have resisted) and via a mobile network router. Neither of us intends to be available at all times so the actual telephone(s) (not smartphone(s) by the way) would usually stay at home (or in whichever accommodation we are staying).