[Home]   [Full version]  

Cell phone companies scramble to halt trafficking

Jul 14 ,Technology



Full size image
(AP) -- For less than $15, you can buy a cell phone loaded with minutes. You can buy more as you go whenever those minutes run out. Best of all, you aren't locked into a long-term contract.





Content from The Associated Press expires 15 days after original publication date.
For more information about The Associated Press, please visit www.ap.org .





Related stories:

Wireless World: Broadband credit scores
Telecom companies are scrounging for ways to mitigate their risk when modeling cutting-edge wireless and broadband technology deployments -- and many are considering using credit scores to vet prospects in order to establish who would be the "best" customer, experts tell United Press International's Wireless World.
New service to stop loose lips from crashing cars
(AP) -- When David Teater's 12-year-old son, Joe, was killed in 2004 by a driver who was talking on a cell phone, he tried to cut back on his own habit of driving and talking. It turned out to be very difficult.
Sony seeks to harmonize music, electronics
(AP) -- Now that Sony Corp. and Bertelsmann AG have broken off their troubled relationship, known as Sony BMG, the Japanese company hopes to harmonize its consumer electronics and its music, a duo that was badly out of sync.
Slower growth expected in tech industry
Lower prices on consumer electronics may help carry the tech industry through a difficult holiday shopping season. But analysts believe corporate spending on computer servers, PCs and business software is entering a period of slower growth that will last well into next year.
KDDI's First 3D Mobile Phone LCD Screen
KDDI Corporation has released a prototype of the world's first 3D LCD display, designed for mobile phones.
Microsoft's Ballmer talks about Vista, Xbox and more
As chief executive of Microsoft, Steve Ballmer heads a company that's not just a PC software giant but also a growing presence in the broader consumer electronics industry.
BlackBerry Storm has touch screen you can feel
(AP) -- Research in Motion Ltd., maker of the BlackBerry, is taking on Apple Inc. with a touch-screen phone that puts a new twist on the technology.
RIM CEO: AT&T still testing delayed BlackBerry
(AP) -- A delayed top-of-the-line BlackBerry phone from Research in Motion Ltd. is still undergoing testing by AT&T Inc., and RIM's co-CEO implied that the carrier wants to avoid the chorus of complaints about performance that greeted the new iPhone this summer.

News discussion:

Technology news

[Home]   [Full version]