ATT to Expand Subsidized Netbooks Nationwide
Posted in: att, lenovo, Mini, netbook, notebook, Notebooks, smartphone, Today's ChiliAT&T has announced plans to offer subsidized netbooks nationwide, which include access to its 3G data network.
The company in April was testing subsidized netbooks in Atlanta and Philadelphia, and soon the devices will be offered in 2,200 AT&T stores throughout the United States, as well as through att.com.
AT&T also plans to offer additional model choices, including netbooks from Acer, Dell and Lenovo. The company has not yet specified which models.
The growth suggests that the subsidized-netbook pilot program went well for AT&T, meaning consumers are actually buying these.
We’re surprised. As I pointed out months ago, buying an AT&T-subsidized netbook for $100 requires committing to a 2-year broadband plan. The plan costs $60 per month, amounting to $1,540 over two years.
On the plus side, you do gain internet access anywhere you can get a cellphone connection. But that’s $60 per month to use the internet on one computer — an extremely limited, low-powered netbook at that, which is typically a companion device.
Why not purchase a smartphone with a tethering plan? That way you’d be able to use the internet on various computers as opposed to just one. Plus, you’d be able to simply add on to your smartphone monthly plan. The idea of another data contract on top of my two-year smartphone commitment is a huge turn-off to me.
Other than that, netbooks are cheap to begin with. On average a pretty decent netbook costs no more than $350, so why pay $100 for a netbook and agree to a $60-per-month, two-year contract?
What do you think, readers? Would you commit to one of these?
Press release [AT&T]
See Also:
- The Next Netbook Trend: Cellphone-Like Contract Deals
- The Netbook Effect: How Cheap Little Laptops Hit the Big Time
- RadioShack’s $100 NetBook Costs $1500 Over Two Years
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