Here are the best (and worst) freebie phones currently available for each major carrier. Act fast, as many of these Black Friday deals expire before Monday. Also note that all deals below are current as of Wednesday afternoon, and there is no guarantee they won't sell out early.
HTC Droid Incredible (Verizon)
This touchscreen device boasts more than five hours of talk time while featuring an 8.0 megapixel camera and FM tuner. The Droid Incredible has fingertip access to the more than 100,000 apps available in the Android Market, and also includes deeper social integration with services like Facebook, Twitter and Flickr.
While the Droid Incredible is not as cool to own as Apple’s (AAPL) iconic smartphone, being carried on Verizon’s (VZ) more reliable network is enticing to any iPhone owner who experiences too many dropped signals on AT&T (T).
What to avoid: Verizon subscribers should pass on devices like the Samsung Zeal Phone that aren’t connected to a major mobile operating system like Android, Apple’s iOS, BlackBerry OS or HP’s webOS. While conveniences like a flip-style format and QWERTY keypad are nice, with smartphones, it’s all about what’s on the inside. As more consumers and manufacturers embrace the major operating systems, independent offerings like the Zeal will become obsolete.
Palm Pixi Plus (AT&T)
The Pixi Plus, like its counterpart the Palm Pre, features arguably the best web browsing experience available on any smartphone, email supported by Microsoft Exchange, Yahoo! Mail and other major clients, and access to a growing number of popular apps including the iPhone and Android hit game Angry Birds.
What to avoid: Not having clear and easy Wi-Fi access made the Nokia Surge 6790 dead-on-arrival when it debuted last year. While the phone is great for texting, it fails in almost everything else. With its overpriced games (Nokia’s Symbian operating system is miles behind the major players with minimal access to apps), as well as performance and data transfer issues, this is one phone that barely lives up to its penny price-point.
HTC Hero (Sprint)
Built-in Google mobile services like Search, Maps, Gmail and YouTube are nice to have at your fingertips, as well as all the apps and the Sprint-specific features like turn-by-turn navigation and full-motion video on demand.
What to avoid: While we applaud the environmentally-friendly LG Remarq - which is partially comprised from recycled materials - the phone’s limited camera features and weak battery make it tough to recommend.
BlackBerry Bold 9700 (T-Mobile)
Thankfully, the phone is not all business! Easy web surfing and pre-installed apps like Slacker Radio are fun to have between meetings, as is access to the thousands of titles available at the BlackBerry App World store.
What to avoid: Motorola (MOT) is manufacturing some of the best Android phones on the market including the DROID X and DROID Pro. Accordingly, you should avoid the clunky and outdated Motorola CLIQ. When the phone isn’t experiencing software crashes or placing calls without your knowledge, its heavy emphasis on social networking is a turnoff, and the web browser is an embarrassment.
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