practicality: (Default)
Canadian cell phone plans are so ridiculously bad compared to the US. I had T-Mobile's cheapass plan - $20, 100 anytime minutes and 500 weekend minutes, no roaming or extra long distance fees in the US, and voicemail. The last two bits, from my understanding, are pretty standard in the US, at least.

Not so in Canada. Want to call somewhere out of your area code? Extra thirty cents a minute. Or you could get no extra long distance charges, but pay thirty bucks for one hundred minutes. Total. For the whole month. And as far as I can tell, voice mail is extra.

I need a phone, but this is ridiculous. And yeah, I know, landline is an option, but that unfortunately requires being in the dorm to use, which defeats half the purpose of getting a phone - being able to get in touch with people on the go (the other reason is to have an incoming number people can call - otherwise I'd just use phone cards for four years).

Date: 2006-09-18 06:43 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] shyvus.livejournal.com (from dreamwidth.org)
Get a US cell phone! You are still a us resident, no?

Date: 2006-09-18 03:28 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] momijizukamori.dreamwidth.org
I am, but have you seen the roaming on those things? Seventy-five cents a minute on my T-Mobile plan.

Date: 2006-09-20 03:23 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] shyvus.livejournal.com (from dreamwidth.org)
Baaaah! Whatthecrap!

T-mobile is EVIL!

CINGULAR IS PWN!

GET CINGULAR!

You can call me for free. And I am pwn.

pwwwwwn.

Date: 2006-09-20 03:37 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] momijizukamori.dreamwidth.org
The roaming is terrible on that, too D:

Date: 2006-09-18 10:54 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] ext_9476 (from dreamwidth.org)
Fuck Canada?

Date: 2006-09-18 11:26 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] momijizukamori.dreamwidth.org
In this sense, yes.

(Also, apparently my school has an exchange program with your's XD; You should come join me in The Raining for a term)

Date: 2006-09-19 05:03 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] ext_9476 (from dreamwidth.org)
Maybe, though I'd admittedly rather go to Japan for foreign exchange. I'm dating a freaking Canadian. Convince me to come?<s?

Date: 2006-09-19 07:09 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] momijizukamori.dreamwidth.org
I'd kind of like to go to Japan, but I know my Japanese won't be good enough :\ So maybe England.

Uh. Hmm. Pretty and green? You don't have to learn a second language to be here? Faculty of Science _rocks_? Gaming club wins? I will know all the cool places by then?

Date: 2006-09-21 08:48 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] ext_9476 (from dreamwidth.org)
Or you could come out here. When you're six feet under snow we're still wearing t-shirts.

Date: 2006-09-21 03:39 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] momijizukamori.dreamwidth.org
You're thinking of Halifax, I think. Or possibly Jo, stuck out in Winnipeg, although the problem there is less that it's snowing and more that it's -40F _not_ counting windchill. Vancouver gets like...a foot of snow, maybe. Of course, then everyone panicks, because they're all 'What is this cold white stuff falling from the sky instead of our beloved rain?!', kind of like Southerners do (I was amused the year that Katsucon got snowed in - it was like a foot and a half, which is by no means a small amount, but that same storm dropped more like two and a half feet on us in MA).

Date: 2006-09-21 09:34 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] ext_9476 (from dreamwidth.org)
Yeah. You see, to me, snow is still snow, and anything over two feet is unfathomable. When I lived in Texas, we got maybe a foot or so of snow during the winter, and that was a snowstorm to us. I've been an American Southwesterner my entire life. Never been up north at all, further than North Carolina.

Halifax gets that much snow? I thought island climates were more temperate, even that far up north. Winnipeg does look like it's in the part of the United States that gets hammered, but that's smack inland, so that makes a hell of a lot more sense. And wow, I thought you were on the east coast somewhere for some reason, not British Columbia. Isn't the west great? Granted, I've never been further north than San Francisco, but still.

I do envy the fact that anybody north of me can get away with wearing a trenchcoat more than half the year without dying. And clothes with sleeves. Blah. I dress like I belong in New York and I, for all practical purposes, live in Death Valley.

Date: 2006-09-22 05:57 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] momijizukamori.dreamwidth.org
That whole little upper corner (Newfoundland even worse, actually) gets doubly screwed - coastal means more rainfall, but the Gulf Stream leaves the Eastern Seaboard around Virginia (which is why it's cold in New England), so it's still freezing, so you get this (http://www.bitstop.ca/snow_2003.htm).

The west is great, though, if a bit hippie-vegetarian-ish XD; I miss my leather trench, though - didn't have space in my bags, so it's getting mailed to me.

Profile

practicality: (Default)
practicality

September 2020

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
131415 16171819
20212223242526
27282930   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

  • Base style: Abstractia by chiming
  • Theme: Abyss by chiming

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 4th, 2025 02:34 pm