orcishgamer: In the US T-Mobile is the only carrier that will give you a break and won't require a contract if you come with your own phone. Yes, even if you buy your own EVO, for example, Sprint will require you to sign a full priced, 2 year contract before they will grant you service. That the DOJ isn't all over this kind of shit is a testament to how much corporate America has their fingers in government.
Ah well that's too bad. Here at least, nearly all of the phones, I think the iPhone was the only exception, are available from the carriers, in a sense similar to retailers. You just pay for the phone. They really don't require that you sign a contract or get a prepaid number, or anything else.
Signing contracts will get you a lower price, but the fact remains that the phone is freely available for purchase.
For example, LG Optimus 7 (running on WP7) is available for around 25,000 MKD (which translates to something around $550, from Vip. This is the price you pay for the phone alone, without signing any contracts and stuff.
I got the phone for around 4,000 MKD, or for around $90. My whole family was on T-Mobile, on a family contract, and just before the contract ended, literaly a few days only, we transfered to Vip. For transfering and making new contracts, Vip was offering discounts / free phones, and similar promotions. So, we choose to get "value" for our contracts, and merged them together, and that's how the phone got down to $90.
Basically, right now I use the phone without any contracts, and I'm not obliged to use a Vip SIM in it either. My family's contract package got extended by two years though, now on Vip. But all is well, since we have free 1000 minutes in the Vip network, and the price per minutes for other networks is a lot lower than before when we were with T-Mobile.
Bah, off to confugure SQL Server 2008 R2 now...