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  <title>Comments for Republic Wireless Hybrid WiFi / Cell VoIP Service for $19/month</title>
  <subtitle>VoIP &amp; Gadgets blog - Latest news in VoIP &amp; gadgets, wireless, mobile phones, reviews, &amp; opinions</subtitle>
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    <id>tag:blog.tmcnet.com,2011:/blog/tom-keating//4.47856</id>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blog.tmcnet.com/blog/tom-keating/wireless/republic-wireless-hybrid-wifi-cell-voip-service-for-19month.asp" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://blog.tmcnet.com/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=4/entry_id=47856" title="Republic Wireless Hybrid WiFi / Cell VoIP Service for $19/month" />
    <published>2011-11-08T20:56:27Z</published>
    <updated>2011-11-09T20:06:00Z</updated>
    <title>Republic Wireless Hybrid WiFi / Cell VoIP Service for $19/month</title>
    <summary>What if you could get a cellular plan for $19/month with unlimited voice? Well, you can (sort of) using republic wireless&apos;s hybrid WiFi/cellular network approach. It includes unlimited WiFi VoIP calling, 550 minutes of cellular voice calling, 150 texts, and...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Tom Keating</name>
      <uri>http://blog.tmcnet.com/blog/tom-keating/</uri>
    </author>
    
    <category term="Android" />
    
    <category term="Gadgets" />
    
    <category term="Google" />
    
    <category term="Mobile Phones" />
    
    <category term="SIP" />
    
    <category term="TMCnet" />
    
    <category term="VoIP" />
    
    <category term="Wireless" />
    
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      <![CDATA[What if you could get a cellular plan for $19/month with unlimited voice? Well, you can (sort of) using <a href="http://www.republicwireless.com/">republic wireless's</a> hybrid WiFi/cellular network approach. It includes unlimited WiFi VoIP calling, <span class="faqbody">550 minutes of cellular voice calling, 150 texts, and 300 megabytes of data</span>. republic wireless is a division of Bandwidth.com, whose network and  solutions power Google, Pinger, Skype, Groupme, RingCentral, Phonebooth, and others.<br /><br /><img class="mt-image-none" src="http://blog.tmcnet.com/blog/tom-keating/images/republic-wireless-dialing.jpg" alt="republic-wireless-dialing.jpg" width="500" height="366" /><br /><br />The caveats: There is a <a href="http://republicwireless.com/join">$199 startup fee</a>, which gives you a LG Optimus phone running Android 2.3. Phone choices is a bit limited and I wish they allowed you to BYOP - Bring Your Own Phone. They call this "Hybrid Calling" because their service uses Wi-Fi networks by default for voice and falls back to Sprint's cell network if no Wi-Fi networks are available. If use too much actual cellular data and the company <a href="http://www.republicwireless.com/catch">and they'll ask you to get back on track</a>, but will eventually give you the boot.<br /><br />If you're in range of Wi-Fi networks on most occasions, this certainly makes for an inexpensive cell phone plan. They claim most people are in range of Wi-Fi networks 60% of the time. This definitely has some niche applications. I can see parents giving this inexpensive offering to teenagers for instance, though this service should simply prevent further cell calling if limits are exceeded instead of booting the customer. Let 911 calls through obviously even if they've exceeded their limits.<br /><br />Of course, if Google offered WiFi calling via their Google Voice platform leveraging an Android app, then Google could kill republic wireless. Though Google would tick off their carrier partners in the process.<br /><br />Check out <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/07/republic-wireless-officially-unveils-19month-service-unlimited-everything-no-contracts/">Techcrunch's</a> take.]]>
      
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