"Rest assured that this is an isolated issue..."
*** edit- I want to get all the stuff off of my phone. What is the quickest and easiest way to do this, please?
btw, has anyone had success with a factory reset stopping the random shutdowns?
btw, has anyone had success with a factory reset stopping the random shutdowns?
My random shutdowns were getting progressively worse so I decided to do a factory reset, but it honestly did not help for long if at all. I then found Captivate Keep Alive as stated previously, but that also only worked for a few days and I had to constantly adjust the settings.
I decided to make a leap to a custom ROM and that has been the best solution in my case thus far. I haven't had any random shutdowns since I installed one which has been about a month now. If I were you, and your biggest concern is indeed the shutdowns, I would go down the list trying the least destructive of the options first (i.e.. Captivate Keep Alive, then Factory Reset, then maybe a custom ROM OR return the phone to get a replacement if worse comes to worse)
I just got a replacement for mine. I was getting random shutdown with stock and cooked roms. If you go through ATT they will ask you what version you are on, what color is the label under the battery (water damage check.....voided warranty if it isn't white), and they will ask you to back everything up and do a master reset. I still got to use my old phone while i waited for the new one to arrive. Might be an option if you don't want to lose your phone for a couple of weeks.
AT&T is generally very good when it comes to getting a replacement phone. Usually if you say you want a replacement, they will do so, as long as you don't abuse the privilege. What usually happens is they send you a box with the replacement phone in it as well as a return slip for the defective one. You send the defective phone back via the box and slip they provided. If you do not return the phone within a timely manner (2 weeks I believe), they will charge you for the second phone, so don't delay too long in sending the defective one back.
That is exactly what happened and how it happened. 2 weeks and i just got a reminder text today.
AT&T is generally very good when it comes to getting a replacement phone. Usually if you say you want a replacement, they will do so, as long as you don't abuse the privilege. What usually happens is they send you a box with the replacement phone in it as well as a return slip for the defective one. You send the defective phone back via the box and slip they provided. If you do not return the phone within a timely manner (2 weeks I believe), they will charge you for the second phone, so don't delay too long in sending the defective one back.
Bought through wirefly, so I'm s.o.l on taking it back to ATT.
Unless someone tells me otherwise
Bought through wirefly, so I'm s.o.l on taking it back to ATT.
Unless someone tells me otherwise
Yep, my family made the mistake of buying the Lg Vu. We bought 4 of them, all 4 broke at least once. That was a nightmare after the 4th one, we had to go to a corporate store and prove the 5th one was defective. I hope no one ever has to go through that with a phone. From now on our family is not buying all the same phone again either, though we somehow ended up with 2 Captivates lol.
If anyone is considering going with LG phones, I hope their smart phones are better quality than their other phones because we had the same experience with my wife's LG Shine. It was replaced by AT&T twice, the first within 1 year of purchase, and the second within 90 days of exchange. The third phone worked poorly enough that I used my AT&T eligible upgrade to replace her phone with a Samsung Eternity. She did have to do an exchange on her Eternity within the first year, but the second one lasted more than a year before we upgraded to Captivates.
Just a word of warning, don't go from the Samsung Captivate to an LG phone to get a better quality phone. It may be similar quality to Samsung or worse.
The LG Vu is a smartphone.
Not according to AT&T, otherwise it would have required a smartphone data plan. When the Vu was available it did not require a data plan and if you did get a data plan it was only $15 a month rather than the smart phone data plan that was $30 a month. The LG Vu is similar to the Samsung Eternity, they are considered feature phones, mostly aimed at texters.
I believe the line drawn by the carriers (in most situations) is that smart phones have corporate e-mail capabilities like Exchange or Blackberry mail support and iPhones (which now supports Exchange but didn't used to). Of course there are exceptions to every rule so that AT&T can charge you more for a phone that they consider "smart".
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