Alan Parkington <alanparkington@team.telstra.net> wrote:
> Are you still hanging on to one of the three most used CDMA handsets
> in Australia? - the Nokia 2112, the Nokia 6225 and the Nokia 2280.
> Nokia mobile phones are far and away the most popular CDMA handsets still in use across the country and Telstra is
> calling on people to help round them up.
And the owners of them are making an obscene gesture in Telstra's general direction, as always.
> Telstra is concerned that some people don't even realise they have a CDMA phone, despite repeated attempts to notify
> them through direct mail and SMS alerts.
So why just concentrate on those Nokias, fuckwit.
> They may use the mobile only for emergencies, or have it stored away in the car glove box or kitchen drawer and simply
> have forgotten about it.
Must be one of those rocket scientist fuckwits.
> "No one wants a situation where a customer goes to use their CDMA mobile after the scheduled network closure on 28
> January 2008, only to discover they have no service," said Telstra Country WideT Executive Director, Gary Goldsworthy.
Pathetic.
> If you are unsure as to whether or not you have a CDMA mobile you can
> check by removing the back of the handset where the battery is located. Unlike GSM mobiles, CDMA handsets don't have
> SIM cards.
Most of the technoklutzes wouldnt know what a sim
card was if it bit them on their lard arse, fuckwit.
> Or, ask at your Telstra shop.
Or tell you to go and fuck yourself.
> You can drop off your old CDMA phone for recycling and upgrade to a Next GT mobile phone by visiting your nearest
> Telstra Shop.
And you can make an obscene gesture in Telstra's general direction too.
> It is quick and easy,
Even quicker and easier to make an obscene gesture in Telstra's general direction.
> and you can keep your existing CDMA mobile number if you switch over to a Next GT phone before the network closes on
> 28 January.
And you can if you wait till it actually closes too.
> "The good news for loyal Nokia users is that there are a number of Nokia mobile phones now available on the Next GT
> network, including the Nokia N95 that has Telstra's Blue Tick for recommended handheld use in rural areas," Mr
> Goldsworthy said.
Pity about the price of it. Why dont you send one of those to everyone
you clowns have shafted by killing the cdma network to no benefit what
so ever to the absolute vast bulk of those users ?