National Access Long Distance

Showing posts with label power outage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label power outage. Show all posts

Monday, October 7, 2013

A Traditional Landline vs. Alternative Services

With technology advancing as fast as it has, 20 years from now cell phone and cable providers could provide the same reliability as a traditional landline does, but right now they don’t. Consider the following before deciding to rely solely on your mobile phone.

Bundling phone service with a cable provider or just having a cell phone may save a few dollars.  However, people must remember the old cliché “you get what you pay for”. With a cable provider when the cable goes out you lose all services through them including phone and internet. Additionally once your initial contract through the cable provider expires, your rates will jump dramatically for the bundle.

Cell phones provide a convenience of being at your fingertips, in the case of a large scale emergency such as September 11th or a natural disaster. However, the convenience goes out the window when you are unable to use your cell, because the towers are jammed with traffic. Not to mention the convenience is also gone when you lose track of your cell phone or it is stolen. Then you have to take money out of your savings to replace it when not eligible for an upgrade.  If you just need a phone for local calling purposes a cell phone is the cheaper avenue, while the landline is more suitable for long distance.

Another avenue for phone service is voice over i.p. it has many of the same flaws. If the internet goes out you will be without a phone.    

If you are a business owner canceling your landlines and selecting an alternative service can be extremely costly. All the alternatives hinge on one of two things; either you are required to have power or internet.  If the power is out your customers will not be able to contact you, simply taking their money to one of your competitors. So are you going to risk throwing money down the drain with something that is not reliable?

Contact National Access Long Distance to save money on your long distance services.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Your Home Called...It wants to talk too!

In today's society, to not have a cell phone would almost place you in a category of being archaic. If you weren't able to play games, text people, check your Facebook status, what would you do on the elevator or walking from place to place?  In all the time you spend on your mobile entertainment system, did you ever stop and think how the home feels?  Did you consider the total effects of not having a landline in your house?
The first thing to consider is the fact that your life, even as busy as it may be, is not 24 hours a day away from your home. At some point you do have to go home, especially if you have a family with kids.  We all have experienced some of the pitfalls of cell phones at home; starting with the dreaded "low bar" areas within your house or backyard.  How many times have you had dropped calls in the most comfortable area of your house? Never mind the fact that your carrier promised that this phone has strong reception and that their coverage blankets the city you’re in. No matter what, there is always some blank spots or spots in your house that seem to not have the best reception.
Do you really want to deal with a choppy scratchy call when you are talking to loved ones or about your personal business? How many times have you walked away from your phone accidentally leaving it on silent to come back to a missed call?
At the end of the day, no wireless network is flawless. So if your household has no landline phone in it and there is an emergency at school with the kids, do you want to risk not being able to be contacted because the cell phone isn’t working? 
In addition, what about the others in the house? Do you really want to have to pay for multiple cell phones? Besides you know how your kids are going to use them more than their school books, which means over charges, unless you are going to pay for unlimited.
The VOIP system isn't that much more comfort. VOIP is subject to power outages, viruses (since it is CPU based), deadlines as well as signal strength (bandwidth) when other devices are using the internet in your home.
If you were to be robbed, how are you going to call the police?  We all know that thieves target cell phones and computers. The weather can also have a major effect on both cell phones and VOIP. Just ask the victims of Hurricane Sandy and Hurricane Katrina. The landline though can work through power outages and won’t rely on the cell phone towers everyone else is using.  If you can’t talk on a call to emergency services on a landline they have your address automatically and can send services to you.
About 64 percent of homes in the U.S. still have landlines. The call quality of a landline is superior to those of cell phones and through power outages. Landlines help you buffer out unwanted calls to your cell phone by being a main point of contact.

The landline helps your home feel safe, especially via a home security system. So keep your home happy and in touch with its own phone. And if you want to save money with better rates on your long distance service, contact National Access long Distance. 

Friday, September 20, 2013

Landline as a backup phone...

What is one of the biggest and most important reasons to carry a landline? It is for the reliability to make 911 emergency calls. This is important in any household.  Cell phones cannot compete with the dependability of a landline for at home emergencies. With the ease of use for children and seniors, reliability in power outages and ability to get emergency responders quickly are all reasons the landline is the best­ option to have in the home.

The landline isn’t just great for a family phone; it is also there to make emergency calls even if the power goes out. Cell phones are no good once their battery power is out. Unlike cell phones you will not lose or misplace a corded phone that is your dedicated landline. Also when you call 911 on a landline it gives the dispatcher your exact location instead of general area, which will make it a lot quicker to get responders to your aid.  Having a landline for this reason alone shows its importance.  Another great reason to have the landline as your emergency home phone is its ease of use for children and seniors.  With the advanced technology of cell phones it can make them more complicated for seniors and small children to use. A landline can remain basic and easier for seniors and children to make an emergency call if needed.


All around the landline phone is the best choice to make an emergency call.  Even if you already have a cell phone and love it, it is still wise to keep a landline in the home for back up if nothing more than for emergencies. To save money on your landline long distance contact National Access Long Distance.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Everybody's Parachute!

Keeping your landline makes sure every family member or visitor is safely grounded.   With a landline you have a "go to resource” when a natural disaster or emergency occurs.  

Landlines have secure power, are easy to locate and usually aren't silent. Consider this:

  • Landlines are never incapable of making a call due to cell tower volumes which can be compromised during power outages or civic emergencies.  
  • You know exactly where your phone is every time you really need it. Imagine if someone was breaking into your house and you couldn't find your cell phone?
  • Have you ever tried looking for your cell phone when it's changed to silent mode? Unless you remember exactly where you left it, you could be searching for hours. But not with a landline; it won’t slip under the couch pillow when on silent.

With a family phone, signal strength is never an issue. For some people, reception can be poor even in their own home. Sometimes you don't find this out until you switch carriers and then you are stuck with a spotty service or static on the line. But have you ever heard of that happening with a landline.

Many people in your home need to depend on a landline. Be it a visitor without a cell phone, a child or grandma, your landline has you covered - just like a parachute.