Anonymous wrote:We recently stayed in a VRBO that only had Amazon Prime and Netflix. There was nothing to watch!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have verizon fios for internet
Hulu
Amazon prime videos
Netflix
No landline. Totally unnecessary in this day and age.
OP here. Thank you. I agree with you that landline is unnecessary, but we need it for the fire sprinkler system. Alternatively, we can set up a wireless fire and alarm system, but we need to pay about $200 upfront and $20 more each month. I am hoping that there are cheap landline options out there.
The verizon landlines can be really cheap. Just reduce all options down to dial tone only. You don't pay anything for 800 numbers, the alarm systems, or incoming calls. Plus there is no dependency on battery back-up for this power outage prone area. My Oct 2013 bill would have been about $20 if I had a published number. Dialtone is $10 but the whole thing doubles based on taxes:
Current Charges
Dial Tone Line 10
Non-Published Service 3.63
Current Activity Total $13.63
Total Taxes, Governmental Surcharges and Fees $3.34
Total Verizon Surcharges and Other Charges & Credits $7.03
$24.00
-3.63
$20.37
All those surcharges are about $2 to the state and the rest is federal.
We spend about 105/month for cable /internet/landline.
Anonymous wrote:We have Verizon FIOS for internet and phone. Like everyone else, Verizon has great intro rates, especially if you include cable, since that's what they want you to do. Sooner than you think, the intro is over and you're paying the big bucks. I think we're paying $90 for internet and phone when you include all the taxes.
We watch stuff through the antenna and on Amazon Prime. If you love sports, you can buy the season for NFL, NHL, MLB.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have verizon fios for internet
Hulu
Amazon prime videos
Netflix
No landline. Totally unnecessary in this day and age.
OP here. Thank you. I agree with you that landline is unnecessary, but we need it for the fire sprinkler system. Alternatively, we can set up a wireless fire and alarm system, but we need to pay about $200 upfront and $20 more each month. I am hoping that there are cheap landline options out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No landline. Totally unnecessary in this day and age.
I disagree with that. We have a landline because we have multiple people in our household, not all of whom have cell phones, and one of whom has a life threatening allergy. I can just imagine a scenario where I am out running errands, my husband goes into anaphylactic shock, and my young child is digging through pockets/etc trying to find a phone to call 911, after she's potentially helped administer an epi pen to her dad. A landline is a low-cost safety feature.
What may be slightly less necessary is my insistence that my landline be copper. My landline is always on and we have a corded phone in the kitchen. Our phone is not "on until the backup power supply dies." The power can go out for 5 days, and we will still have phone.
I am risk averse, so I think my belief that a copper landline is necessary is likely to be overkill for some people, but I question the situations where people think landlines aren't necessary at all.
We cut cable television, but I'm unwilling to cut the landline. Call me a paranoid Luddite!
Thanks for the response. What is your copper landline provider?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No landline. Totally unnecessary in this day and age.
I disagree with that. We have a landline because we have multiple people in our household, not all of whom have cell phones, and one of whom has a life threatening allergy. I can just imagine a scenario where I am out running errands, my husband goes into anaphylactic shock, and my young child is digging through pockets/etc trying to find a phone to call 911, after she's potentially helped administer an epi pen to her dad. A landline is a low-cost safety feature.
What may be slightly less necessary is my insistence that my landline be copper. My landline is always on and we have a corded phone in the kitchen. Our phone is not "on until the backup power supply dies." The power can go out for 5 days, and we will still have phone.
I am risk averse, so I think my belief that a copper landline is necessary is likely to be overkill for some people, but I question the situations where people think landlines aren't necessary at all.
We cut cable television, but I'm unwilling to cut the landline. Call me a paranoid Luddite!