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| ![]() Live the Tech Lifestyle for LessEven after you shell out the dough for the computer, home theater set up or mobile device, you have to pay for Internet, data plans, and tons of monthly subscription fees to keep the toys buzzing and clicking.
Drop your cable or satellite. With some of us paying over $100 a month you might want to take the big leap. You can pay less per month and simply use more of the services you were already or can subscribe to. It may not be for everyone, but if you're already paying for services like Hulu, Netflix and Amazon Prime, they can easily take the place of satellite or cable. If they're not on Hulu, current TV shows can be streamed directly from network websites: ABC, CBS, and NBC all offer several weeks worth of online content you can stream for free. Want to watch on the big screen? Gaming consoles (like X-Box, Playstation of Wii), Roku, Apple TV and some newer BluRay players can all stream content directly to your TV. Google just introduced a new device called Chromecast (www.google.com/ Even if you aren’t willing to ditch it entirely, contact your satellite or cable provider about downgrading to a “broadcast basic” package and then stream the rest of your content. Just making the call will likely lead to discounts from the company working to keep you as a customer. Ditch the landline. Are you still paying for a land line in addition to the monthly mobile phone bill? Stop that! If you simply can't drop it for sentimental reasons, consider switching to a Voice-Over-IP (VOIP) service. Services like Vonage (www.vonage.com) Ditch those long distance charges and make calls directly from computer to computer using VOIP. Providers like Skype (www.skype.com) For those that use a landline for faxing, consider scanning your documents and emailing them to the recipient. Need a phone line for your home alarm? Ask your monitoring company about mobile packages that allow your alarm to contact dispatch over a cell connection. If you'd still like to have a land phone line for emergencies, call your phone provider to ask about “measured rate” plans that will cost much less per month but more per call, then use VOIP, Skype or your cell for most of your calling needs. Lower your mobile phone bill. It's hard to resist surfing the Internet while you're sitting in the doctor's office, but if you're not hooked up to WiFi, those minutes can add up fast. Try to make sure you're always connected to WiFi, and turn off apps that switch to the phone network when WiFi is unavailable. Providers like Skype have applications for mobile-to-mobile calling for a small monthly fee, and video isn’t required. Use them as often as you can on your mobile device when you're connected to WiFi and save minutes with your mobile service provider. We all love our texting but charges can add up fast. Disable automatic text alerts from social media and consider using a free texting app instead of texting through your service provider. If you're Facebook friends, you can download and use Facebook’s free Messenger app and message for free through the application. Review your bill every month and make a note of the small charges that weasel their way onto your bill, including app charges. Make sure to cancel the additional "services" and contact your service provider to have the previous charges reversed. Andrea Eldridge is CEO and co-founder of Nerds On Call, an on-site computer and laptop repair service for consumers and businesses. Andrea is the writer of two weekly columns, Nerd Chick Adventures in The Record Searchlight, and Computer Nerds On Call, a nationally syndicated column for the Scripps-Howard News Service. She regularly appears on ABC, NBC, FOX, and CBS on shows such as Good Day Sacramento, Good Morning Arizona and MORE Good Day Portland, offering viewers easy tips on technology, Internet lifestyle, and gadgets. Andrea recently has begun working with Demand Media to produce content for eHow.com and has written a book for them Smartphone101: About Nerds On Call Established in a spare room in Redding, Calif., in March 2004, Nerds On Call offers on-site computer and laptop repair services to consumers and businesses. Nerds On Call provides trouble-shooting for PCs and Macs, home and office networks, printers, iPods® and MP3 players, handheld devices and cell phones, home theaters and game systems, and virtually every other form of digital entertainment. End
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