Archive for January, 2009

KMart TracFone clearance sale

It seems as though some KMart stores have begun a clearance sale on a couple of TracFone handsets. Some people have reported finding Motorola V170 TracFones for just $2, while the LG 3280 has been found with a price tag of just $5.

Either of these represents a pretty decent bargain even if you only use the phone to get the 20 bonus minutes and 60 days of service on activation, then immediately transfer those minutes and days to another phone. Another option, if you can find one of these bargains, is to keep the phone around simply as a backup. Either way  I would recommend grabbing these deals if you can.

TracFone Promotional Codes revised

The TracFone Promotional Code Database is as up-to-date as it’s been in a while. After allowing some old codes to accumulate for most of 2008, I finally went through and culled out the codes that haven’t been valid for a few months now. I had been hesitant to delete those old codes because sometimes codes might be erroneously reported as expired and I wanted to err on the side of including more codes for people to test for themselves. But the list simply became to big to be effective. So I’ve cut it back, but kept a copy of the old list, which I will not update from this point forward, here:

http://pbush14.wordpress.com/about/2008-tracfone-promotional-code-archive/

The current, continually updated list is here:

http://pbush14.wordpress.com/2008/02/28/free-tracfone-minutes-with-bonus-codes/

I’ve also added a host of new codes to the database. Some of them are reported to expire this month, or the reported expiration date has passed. But as we’ve seen on many occasions, the date that is the “official” expiration date is often meaningless with TracFone codes. So even if a code is supposedly expired, you might want to give it a try just to make sure it works.

Here is the list of the codes I’ve added this time around:

  • 58314 on a 60 minute (or greater) card to get 60 bonus minutes
  • 62498 on a 60 minute (or greater) card to get 40 bonus minutes
  • 53028 on a 60 minute (or greater) card to get 40 bonus minutes
  • 41595 on a DMFL card to get 100 bonus minutes (this card was previously reported to work on the 450 minute cards, but now has also been confirmed on a DMFL card.)
  • 57203 on a 450 minute card to get 50 bonus minutes
  • 91425 on a One Year – 400 minute card to get 250 bonus minutes
  • 58695 on a One Year – 400 minute card to get 250 bonus minutes
  • 12587 on a One Year – 400 minute card to get 200 bonus minutes
  • 53496 on a One Year – 400 minute card to get 200 bonus minutes
  • 81727 on a One Year DMFL card to get 200 bonus minutes

TracFones with Voice-Activated Dialing

Through writing this blog and previous experience maintaining TracFone service for myself and various family members, I’ve had the opportunity to test out a vast majority of the phones offered by TracFone. Many of these TracFone handsets have been a step or two behind those offered by the larger contract carriers in terms of the various features built in to the phones, but the two latest bluetooth-enabled models, the Motorola w376g and the LG 600g, certainly offer far more options than any previous models. However, these two models still lack one element that is, in my opinion, a very important safety feature for some users: voice-activated dialing.

Personally, I don’t recommend that anyone talk on their cell phone while driving, but for those that do I hope that you take the highest safety precautions. Several states and many more municipalities across the country have implemented laws that require drivers to use hands-free headsets if they talk while driving. This is a good safety step, but it doesn’t account for the time that people undoubtedly distract themselves from driving to dial a number. With voice-activated dialing, this distraction can also be reduced.

So I can’t understand why some of the “best” TracFone models eliminate this feature. LG, maker of the 600g, also produces to CDMA TracFone models, and both of those include voice dialing. And Motorola previously manufactured at least one other TracFone handset, the V120, that included voice dialing. So we know that it CAN be done, yet it’s a mystery to me why this option would not be included on the latest and greatest handsets.

If you want a TracFone with hands-free dialing, though, you still have some options. All of the CDMA models currently offered – the LG 3280 and 200C, as well as the Kyocera 126c – include some form of voice-activated dialing. On both of the LG versions, you’ll have to first set up the voice commands for each contact in your list that you want to be able to voice dial, then remember that command when you’re ready to call the person. The Kyocera also allows voice commands to dial a number from your contact list, OR you can speak the phone number digits one-by-one and the phone will then confirm and dial the number you want to call. All of these phones are currently available from TracFone bundled with some form of airtime card.

I also think that this is something worth asking for from TracFone in future handsets. If you share my opinion that voice-activated dialing is an option that’s not only convenient but also a safety feature, perhaps you’d like to let TracFone know that you are concerned about it. You can contact them at the following email address: ERDManagement@tracfone.com. Ask when they will offer a GSM phone with voice-activated dialing, and if they can’t answer that then encourage them to include it in future models. It just might save a life.