Our Reviews Speak for Themselves

At On The Go Solutions, we pride ourselves on our excellent customer service; it’s our foundation, and it’s a big part of why we achieve a continuously growing customer base. Anytime you make a purchase from us, even prior to completing the purchase, we try to make it as easy and simple as possible to pick the right phone for you. Our experts are highly knowledgeable on each phone we have for sale – we actually use our phones every day. We understand that every customer needs something different from their phone, we know this and will take the time to learn what each customer wants and will suggest the right phone for the right user. Take for example these customer reviews:

 

These customers know what it’s like to purchase the incredible devices we sell, and the outstanding customer service we provide, before, and after the sale goes through. With us, you never have to worry about losing that customer support. Between our customer support hotline, our support emails, and even through our social network sites like Twitter (@OTGSolutions) and Facebook), you will receive excellent customer care from start to finish. Not only are we always hoping to have a satisfied customer base, we’re also always looking to improve, so if there is anything we can do to make your time with us better, please feel free to tell any of our sales staff and we will do everything to resolve and implement any necessary changes.

We know you have a lot of choices when purchasing a phone online. But we also know that discerning customers need to trust their online-retailer when it comes to making such an important decision. Take a moment and look through the hundreds of reviews we have online,  since 2003, and we are sure that we will gain your confidence.

 

1 Comment for this entry

  • Vitalya

    (Wireless Phone) We got two of these phones three weeks ago, since then we have found a lot that we like and a tlltie that we really dislike. The dislikes are all things Verizon did to the software. In the comments someone points out that it may be possible to just burn Android 2.2 on to the phone. That is rumored, but isn’t something most people will do. The rumor mill says Spain will get the Froyo release in late October ’10 and people are going to try using that. Verizon has also announced that they will make the Google search engine available on the official 2.2 release, however they won’t be making it the search engine for other services, so when another application starts a search it will still be redirected through the Verizon search portal to Bing. So this is no real improvement over deleting the Bing boxes and installing Google from the marketplace, so their big announcement saves you a couple of minutes whilst making no difference to the software. Another method is to rip-off the Google search elements from another Galaxy S model and install that and a third party application launcher which will then use it, but this is probably more low level messing around than most users will want to do. They shouldn’t need to. If you decide to do that you need the SDK, which you can download for free, and some instructions you can find in the Android forums. Verizon has disabled some of the functionality of Google’s Android operating system and replaced it with their own shoddy software in a cynical attempt to con people in to paying them more. The Google search engine has been excised from the system and replaced with Bing, you can’t remove Bing from the system and you can’t replace it for some purposes. I don’t want earn money for Verizon by allowing MS to show me things MS is being paid to sell me. I’d rather they pay Google to show me things they have been paid to sell me because I prefer their style. It seems a fair return to Google for providing free maps and navigation. But anyway as well as removing Google’s search functionality they have also removed Google’s GPS functionality and maps. That has been replaced by Verizon Navigator and Bing maps. Verizon Navigator is very poor and is expensive. Why should I pay ten bucks a month for a poor application that replaces the free one that Google built into the Android operating system? I had hoped that using Android would mean I didn’t have to put up with Verizon’s tinkering with the O/S. My past experience would suggest that they aren’t very good at it. Happily you can download Google apps from the ap store, but you can’t re-integrate them into the phone. You also can’t eliminate the bloated load of garbage that Verizon added as a revenue minefield for the unwary. If you could I’d have deleted a whole bunch of it by now, things like VCAST, VZNavigator, City ID, Skype and Blockbuster. It’s not just that they are there, even though I don’t use them they get started and use battery and performance; right now my phone is running voice commands, music player, video player, car cradle, bing, City ID and Skype mobile I haven’t started any of those. I might use the music and video players but the others are either entirely unwanted or just useless. As an alternative to paying ten bucks a month for Verizon Navigator (No, really, don’t do that), you can use Google which is probably the best navigation deal for the phone. Alternatively Waze is a popular and sometimes amusing collaborative GPS solution. If you are going to be off the network CoPilot looks like very good value, for $20 you get a full GPS with maps of the whole of North America. CoPilot plotted a route from San Jose CA to Vancouver BC in a couple of seconds, a Motorola TN765T costs a couple of hundred bucks and won’t do that, it can’t route across borders. When you use the Samsung car cradle, which is very good, it automatically starts the car mode. Unfortunately that just offers all the pre-installed pay-per-use software and no apparent way to customize it. Surely there must be? Now the good stuff. Android 2.2 Froyo may be available around October ’10 for this phone, that is rumored to significantly improve performance. This is a really fast tlltie computer with a network connection and a phone application. The menus fly around, most of the time. Occasionally they get bogged down, no idea why, but this is a known issue and supposed to be fixed in v2.2. You can scroll through long lists with the flick of a finger. It’s pretty easy to set it up to connect to wireless networks. Bonding to a Bluetooth headset was simple. The device arrives with a 16Gb MicroSD card and I expect that will keep me happy for a while. The camera seems nice enough from the few pictures I have taken. The LED flash is years ahead of the LG Dare, it actually illuminates the image pretty well and doesn’t turn it

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