by Tdarcos » Wed Apr 13, 2011 7:12 pm
Flack wrote:That's impressive, I think. I've only owned four cell phones in my life. The first was a Nokia 5160, the one with interchangeable face plates. God, I wish I had all the money back I spent on face plates.
I've never bought a face plate, I've never seen the reasoning for it. And I'm too cheap to pay for ringtones, if I could have put one on my phone for free - the way you can upload a wallpaper for one - I might have made one. I don't bother with wallpapers on cell phones either (I love them on my computer, however, I've bought three or four disks of wallpapers to get different pictures and I sometimes change mine depending on mood), but I did make one for an associate of a photo of his favorite cat for his cell phone.
Flack wrote:I left that phone in Vegas on accident and that was that.
I guess that told you the real meaning of "What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas!"
I've sometimes had to leave a phone on standby, is that close?
Flack wrote:I replaced with a Palm Treo which was a great device and a horrible, horrible phone. It's sitting in my closet right now. I replaced that with a Samsung BlackJack, during my "ANYTHING BUT APPLE" era. It was okay, but it was no iPhone. A couple of years ago I bought an iPhone and put the BlackJack in the closet, next to the Treo.
I've probably tossed a half dozen phones. I had one that the front dial plate went bad, it wasn't struck or anything, the plate just shorted out and it kept generating the "2" button. But I learned from that one that not having a backup of all the numbers saved in the phone can be a pain if you can't get to the phone book inside.
I had one that got smashed somehow. You could hear and talk, dial calls and answer them on it but you couldn't see what you were dialing or who was calling you.
My first phone was a much larger TracFone that was probably analog, really big and bulky, and I discarded it when I got the current number I have, which came from Sprint (I like the number, the last 4 are in sequence). Because of number portability, I took it with me when I moved to T-Mobile, then took it with me again when I moved to TracFone. I called Sprint to advise them I was moving their number to T-Mobile and the guy asked why, so I told him. "Because T-Mobile's phones work downstairs in the basement of our house, and yours don't."
Oh, a heads up: even if your contract isn't up and you'd owe them money, because of number portability you can still take your number with you to another carrier. The carrier cannot hold your number hostage. I wasn't on a contract with Sprint, I was month-to-month so it was simple to just cancel them,
after the number was moved. Also, number portability works for landline and cellular numbers, you can move a landline number to a cell phone and vice-versa. The only exception being, of course, that if it's a landline you have to be in the same general area as where the number is assigned. I would not be able to keep my original phone number because I'm in Maryland and my original phone number was a Falls Church, Virginia exchange. And in fact, if TracFone had my current address rather than my old one at my sister's place, I'd have had to give up the number. But as long as I keep buying lease packs they don't care.
And my first incident which encouraged me never to carry a cell phone in my shirt pocket was when a phone I had slid out when I leaned over, and fell in the toilet. Because it was on at the time, it shorted out immediately and I had to get another one.
[quote="Flack"]That's impressive, I think. I've only owned four cell phones in my life. The first was a Nokia 5160, the one with interchangeable face plates. God, I wish I had all the money back I spent on face plates.[/quote]
I've never bought a face plate, I've never seen the reasoning for it. And I'm too cheap to pay for ringtones, if I could have put one on my phone for free - the way you can upload a wallpaper for one - I might have made one. I don't bother with wallpapers on cell phones either (I love them on my computer, however, I've bought three or four disks of wallpapers to get different pictures and I sometimes change mine depending on mood), but I did make one for an associate of a photo of his favorite cat for his cell phone.
[quote="Flack"]I left that phone in Vegas on accident and that was that.[/quote]I guess that told you the real meaning of "What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas!"
I've sometimes had to leave a phone on standby, is that close?
[quote="Flack"]I replaced with a Palm Treo which was a great device and a horrible, horrible phone. It's sitting in my closet right now. I replaced that with a Samsung BlackJack, during my "ANYTHING BUT APPLE" era. It was okay, but it was no iPhone. A couple of years ago I bought an iPhone and put the BlackJack in the closet, next to the Treo.[/quote]
I've probably tossed a half dozen phones. I had one that the front dial plate went bad, it wasn't struck or anything, the plate just shorted out and it kept generating the "2" button. But I learned from that one that not having a backup of all the numbers saved in the phone can be a pain if you can't get to the phone book inside.
I had one that got smashed somehow. You could hear and talk, dial calls and answer them on it but you couldn't see what you were dialing or who was calling you.
My first phone was a much larger TracFone that was probably analog, really big and bulky, and I discarded it when I got the current number I have, which came from Sprint (I like the number, the last 4 are in sequence). Because of number portability, I took it with me when I moved to T-Mobile, then took it with me again when I moved to TracFone. I called Sprint to advise them I was moving their number to T-Mobile and the guy asked why, so I told him. "Because T-Mobile's phones work downstairs in the basement of our house, and yours don't."
Oh, a heads up: even if your contract isn't up and you'd owe them money, because of number portability you can still take your number with you to another carrier. The carrier cannot hold your number hostage. I wasn't on a contract with Sprint, I was month-to-month so it was simple to just cancel them, [i]after[/i] the number was moved. Also, number portability works for landline and cellular numbers, you can move a landline number to a cell phone and vice-versa. The only exception being, of course, that if it's a landline you have to be in the same general area as where the number is assigned. I would not be able to keep my original phone number because I'm in Maryland and my original phone number was a Falls Church, Virginia exchange. And in fact, if TracFone had my current address rather than my old one at my sister's place, I'd have had to give up the number. But as long as I keep buying lease packs they don't care.
And my first incident which encouraged me never to carry a cell phone in my shirt pocket was when a phone I had slid out when I leaned over, and fell in the toilet. Because it was on at the time, it shorted out immediately and I had to get another one.