Cellphone Numbers Overtake Land Lines 

JAMES S. GRANELLI / Los Angeles Times 9jul2005

[Also see: Semi-Annual Wireless Industry Survey - CTIA Jan2005]

 

Mindfully.org note: 
If a cellphone seems like a "necessary evil," then perhaps it's time to end contact with popular media such as TV, radio and newspaper. There's nothing much of value in them anyway, and you'll be reducing the number of encounters with advertisements inferring that you're a loser for not having a cellphone. For that matter, pretty much all the other products of this sick commercial society can be avoided as well. When you get right down to looking at each one, there's not much real value in them, they contribute to ill-health and we end up working for the conveniences rather than them working for us. Finally, cellphones allow the Dept. of Homeland Security to follow you throughout your day. Maybe you'd prefer your own little way of helping George Bush improve US security by owning a cellphone?

Hold the phone.

The number of mobile-phone users in the U.S. surpassed the number of conventional land-based phone lines in the second half of 2004, the government said Friday.

By the end of the year, there were 181.1 million cellphone subscribers, compared with 177.9 million access lines into U.S. homes and businesses, the Federal Communications Commission said in a biannual report.

"It was only a matter of time," said analyst Charles Golvin of Forrester Research Inc. "We've been on this path for a number of years."

A decade ago, the industry had 25 million customers, he said; it should pass 200 million this year.

"We've never had such a monumental shift in the way we select our communications," said John Walls, spokesman for the cellular industry's trade group, CTIA.

The trend, spurred mainly by young people who have never paid for land-line service, is ingrained throughout all age segments, Golvin said.

So ingrained, in fact, that customers in nearly a third of North American households make at least half their long-distance calls at home from their cellphones rather than their more reliable and often cheaper land lines, he said.

About 6% of phone customers have cut the cord to go entirely wireless, Golvin said.

Fay Ray decided not to get a home phone after moving from Los Angeles two years ago to attend Columbia University in New York.

Still, she regards her cellphone as a "necessary evil."

"You're getting charged so much for cellphones that there's no more money left for anything else."

source: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-cellphone9jul09,1,6060696,print.story?coll=la-headlines-business 18jul2005

 

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