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6 votes
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The phone ban has had a big impact on school work (at a school in Iceland)
27 votes -
AT&T announces $7 monthly add-on fee for “Turbo” 5G speeds in US
26 votes -
AT&T widespread cell phone outage in US
27 votes -
4G networks - does SMS and standard voice calls still work if 3G/2G networks are shutting down?
Hey all, Over here in Australia (imagine in USA and a few other countries), the 3G/2G mobile networks are being shutdown. My carrier Vodafone is gradually shutting its down with Dec 15th 2023...
Hey all,
Over here in Australia (imagine in USA and a few other countries), the 3G/2G mobile networks are being shutdown. My carrier Vodafone is gradually shutting its down with Dec 15th 2023 being the final closure date. The 4G network will have VolTE but my device (LG V20) does not appear to support VolTE nor does it look like i can update the firmware easily (if at all) to do so.
Anyone else have this issue with their phone? (i realise it will be older ones)
Question about VolTE though - will sms and standard voice calling still work on 4G on my device or similar devices without VolTE ?.
thanks
Nig24 votes -
Physical keyboard for android phone?
I have a quandary. Even with a decent android keyboard (Typewise offline keyboard), I still find myself hampered by gettingnanstringnofnwordsnwhereni miss the space bar. Sometimes I miss n "A"...
I have a quandary. Even with a decent android keyboard (Typewise offline keyboard), I still find myself hampered by gettingnanstringnofnwordsnwhereni miss the space bar. Sometimes I miss n "A" key. I am very out put by my likelihood of getting "out" when I meant "put" and vice versa.
I am becoming a part time worker / primary parent while my wife goes back to a full time job, which means I do a lot of waiting in places where I'm typing extended sections of text (like this one) in places where its not really practical or appropriate to pull out a laptop.
What I really want is a physical keyboard for my phone. It seems like there are a lot of folding and non-folding options that are meant to work on a table with the phone as a screen. But if I could do that, I could pull out my laptop.
If I had a wish that could get me anything, I'd like a split thumb keyboard where the two halves sandwich (and grip) the phone the way the joycons go on a Nintendo switch.
The best thing I have found so far is this keyboard puck. I have bought a similar device for HTPC, and it is surprisingly easy to use. This still has the downside of requiring the use of with hands and not having a way to hold the phone. Maybe I could 3D print some kind of mount, but something with a built-in mount would be much better.
I'm wondering how others have solved this problem? I'm open to almost anything that makes me a faster /more accurate typist on the go.
20 votes -
Text editing on mobile isn’t ok. It’s actually much worse than you think, an invisible problem no one appreciates.
120 votes -
How to reduce (non-spam) business calls to my personal cell phone?
I have a business phone number that I use for work in addition to my personal cell phone number which I’ve had for 20+ years. I’ve always used my work number for anything job-related (colleague...
I have a business phone number that I use for work in addition to my personal cell phone number which I’ve had for 20+ years. I’ve always used my work number for anything job-related (colleague contact, vendors, sales reps, networking, LinkedIn, etc) and only provide my personal for, well, personal contacts.
But having had my personal number for as long as I have, it’s very easy to Google my name and find that number associated to me.
My issue is that I’m constantly receiving phone calls and voicemails on my personal number from vendors, sales reps, etc that are either for services we use at my job or from vendors in relevant fields contacting me for various reasons. I realize some may lump this kind of outreach into “spam”, but I want to differentiate this kind of outreach from what I consider true spam (robocalls, phishing, non-work related sales calls like for home internet, etc) which just goes ignored and blocked.
I don’t want to answer every call to correct someone to use my work contact info. I can continue ignoring but it does fill my voicemail and I’m hoping to reduce the number of calls I receive on my cell every day (even if it were to only cut it down by 5). Someone suggested changing my outgoing voicemail message to flag it’s my personal number and any work related messages would be ignored while providing my work number. I think this may be the best approach (though I’d skip providing my work number as I don’t need it to start receiving robocalls). I know I’m not the only one that deals with this (but maybe I’m in the minority rather than a majority) and am curious if y'all have this issue and if so, how you manage it?
20 votes -
Downtown Recovery Rankings
17 votes -
Signal removing support for SMS in Android
20 votes -
Age that kids acquire mobile phones not linked to well-being, says Stanford Medicine study
16 votes -
How the FCC shields US cellphone companies from safety concerns
6 votes -
Even a mugger didn’t want my old Nokia. So why are so many people turning to ‘dumbphones’?
12 votes -
Tomorrow is the 75th anniversary of the first mobile phone call
6 votes -
EFF Surveillance Self-Defense - Privacy breakdown of mobile phones
18 votes -
LG to close mobile phone business worldwide
12 votes -
FBI found Ghislaine Maxwell using mobile phone data
15 votes -
The Nokia 3310 is twenty years old today
9 votes -
When phones were fun: Samsung's "Matrix Phone" (2003)
8 votes -
Nokia's collapse turned a sleepy town in Finland into an internet wonderland
5 votes -
Denmark frees thirty-two inmates over flaws in phone geolocation evidence – two-month moratorium on the use of mobile phone records
9 votes -
Flaws in cellphone evidence prompt review of 10,000 verdicts in Denmark
8 votes -
Dish agrees to $5 billion US deal for wireless assets
3 votes -
Bill Gates on making “one of the greatest mistakes of all time”
10 votes -
Text, don't call: The new phone etiquette
14 votes -
The route of a text message, a love story
12 votes -
Mobile phone radiation may affect memory performance in adolescents, study finds
3 votes -
The SIM Hijackers
8 votes