
Many users prefer more popular services such as Spotify (free or $9.99 without ads) or Rhapsody ($9.99 a month). Beats Music: A paid music on-demand service that provides up to 5 accounts on 10 devices for $14.99 a month.However, if you like AT&T's interface, you can stick with it. Many other apps, including Android Device Manager and Avast! Anti-Theft do the same for free. AT&T Mobile Locate: Locates a lost phone and remote wipes / locks it for free.Keep if you own anything from Amazon's digital library. Amazon Kindle: eReader for Amazon's eBooks.If you plan to buy things from Amazon on your phone, keep it. You'd be better off with other services like Hulu Plus or Netflix. Mobile TV: On-demand or live streaming TV from a number of cable channels, including Disney Channel, A&E and Fox Business, for $9.99 a month.
Isis Wallet: A tap-to-pay / mobile payment service that requires you get a special SIM card and works in only a few retail chains. Do you really want to spend $36 / year to potentially find out where your junk calls are coming from? However, Android already shows you the photo and name of anyone in your contact list for free. Caller Name ID: For $2.99 a month, this service gives you the name and location of unknown callers. It's not harmful, but not particularly useful or necessary either. AT&T Messages: If set up, it replaces the default SMS messenger and call log with AT&T's own messaging app. You already get the industry-leading Google Maps for free so the carrier service is a complete waste of money. AT&T Navigator: A maps service that costs $9.99 a month. However, other cloud services such as Google Drive, Dropbox and One Drive provide more and work across platforms and devices. AT&T Locker: AT&T's cloud storage service provides 5GB of free space. Other apps, such as Life360, offer some tracking for free and charge lower prices for their premium services. AT&T Family Map: For $9.99 a month ($14.99 for 5 phones) you get to track your family members on a map.