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1 in 5 Americans Going Cell Phone Only



Bad news for traditional phone companies: Apparently, the recession has only accelerated the move away from landline phones. Now, one in every five American homes has ditched their landline all together, and cellular-only households outnumber those relying exclusively on traditional phones.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of cell phone only homes jumped 3-percent in the last half of 2008 -- a record pace. To illustrate the point, it has been reported that, since March of 2008, Verizon's landline business shrunk by 5 million customers, while its cell phone business grew by 20 million customers.

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Cell Phones

Businesses and Colleges Cutting Landlines

Businesses and Colleges Cutting Landlines
The writing has been on the wall for a while for landlines. We've reported more than once on how more people are going cell phone only (especially those under 30). Now, however, it's not just households, but businesses and colleges that are starting to ditch traditional wired phones and signaling danger for any company that exclusively operates landline phone services.

The City Administrator's office in Washington D.C. and semi-conductor manufacturer KLA-Tencor, have taken the first steps towards cutting the cord. They've both launched pilot programs in order to save money where small numbers of employees (between 30 and 40) have been issued cell phones and given up their dedicated desk lines.

St. Mary's College in Notre Dame, IN; Marquette University in Milwaukee, WI; Roanoke College in Salem, VA; and Elon University in Elon, NC have taken more strident steps. The colleges have removed landlines from dorms over the past two years and educators have embraced their mobiles as a better way of keeping in touch with students on the go.

It's only a matter of time before we think of wired phones the same way we do of vinyl records and VHS tapes: quaint relics of a simpler time. [From: USA Today]

Cell Phones

TrueCall Fights Telemarketers and Unknown Callers

Telemarketers-turned-inventors from the United Kingdom have started shipping TrueCall (£99.99), a device that acts as an automated secretary on your land line, either forwarding trusted numbers to your phone or answering untrusted numbers with an automated message and shooing them away. When an unrecognized number dials in, TrueCall asks them who they are and then rings you asking whether or not you want to take it. Sure, it's not the most fun way to automatically ditch unscrupulous callers, but we'd like to listen in on the conversation when a robocall reaches this baby -- it'd be like one wall talking to another wall.

[Via Slashdot]

Cell Phones

30% of Americans Prefer Cell Phones to Land lines

30% of Americans Prefer Cell Phones to Land linesLate last year, we reported on news that an amazing 82 percent of Americans owned cell phones, with 250 million of the things in use. Now comes an Associated Press (AP) report that says that three out of 10 Americans either prefer their cell phone or rely on it exclusively.

The numbers come as part of a federal study -- by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), no less -- which also indicated that 16-percent of households have no traditional landline phone and rely exclusively on a mobile phone. Another 13-percent said they have both a landline and a cell phone, but rely almost exclusively on the their mobiles. Unsurprisingly, multi-family residences, with multiple renters living under one roof, were most likely to have no land lines, while nearly a third of all people under 30 rely exclusively on their coveted mobile phones.

The study was conducted, most likely, to help the CDC figure out better ways to help cell people in medical emergencies, since it's becoming increasingly difficult for 911 operators to know where mobile phone users are calling from.

The level of mobile-phone-first users is sure to keep rising in the coming years. Given the and if we were betting men we'd wager phones of the wired variety will be in a minority within the next few years. [Source: AP/AOL News]

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