schmidty622 (10-10-2018)
My wife and I went to see Alan Jackson earlier this year. We were in line for a couple of drinks when all of a sudden 40,000 phones started sounding an alarm, it was either during the opening act, or in between the opening act and Mr Jackson's set. In that setting, with all those phones going off at the same time, everyone at first glanced at each other with a WTF, is there a bomb about to go off look on their face before realizing that 40,000 people, all gathered in one space just got an amber alert at the same time.
Posting in the clutch since twenty ought two.
There should never ever be such thing as a "Presidential Alert" text message.
Conservatives flipped out when U2 got into their itunes, silence when it comes to this.
We have one iPhone in the family and I too bought it used for about $150. But AT&T also charges us $30/mo for a minimal data plan plus 25/mo for iPhone access. I don't need more of those charges.
If my flip phone can be tracked I'm wondering why I wasn't on this emergency alert thing. In reality I don't think they track dumb phones very often
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Hey, I don't live in my parent's basement. Don't talk to me about finances. Stick to minor league baseball.
Very few people "need" a smart phone. You are probably one of those few who do but I'm not.
Quite the contrary. I'm doing great today. It's my birthday!
http://www.redszone.com/forums/membe...username<r=S
I don't know, I heard many liberals complain when U2 showed up in their itunes; I've also heard conservatives complain about this.
conservative, liberal we all complain, just louder about things that "flip our switch"
Posting in the clutch since twenty ought two.
I hated when that garbage U2 album came preloaded on my phone.
What would you say.....ya do here?
No one needs a smart phone. Just like no one needs a car. Or a whole lot of other things. Doesn't mean it's not a much better experience to have those things.
A "smart phone" is so much more useful. Do I need to know how to get from point A to point B? Probably. My phone does a whole lot better helping me out doing that than a map. And it saves me a whole bunch of time. Do I need to find out where Store ABC is and if there's one close by? My phone does that a whole lot easier than, well, I'm not even sure what the other option would be than asking a bunch of strangers around me at the time. For those things alone it's worth it. That I can also use it to listen to all of the music I want, all of the podcasts I want, browse the internet while sitting in a waiting room, check out information on things while shopping.... I just don't understand the resistance to a smart phone. I understand if it's simply not affordable. Given your attempted cheap shot, you clearly can afford it, or at least believe you can. So what's the resistance for? The smart phone is literally a phone, a dictionary, an encyclopedia, a GPS system, the white pages, the yellow pages, a computer, a radio, a TV, an MP3 player - all in one. And it fits into your pocket.
In the month of October, using apps on my cell phone I have:
Followed the playoffs
Listened to podcasts
Listened to music
Streamed all of the above via bluetooth to my car's
Streamed all of the above via bluetooth to speakers in my house
Accessed Twitter
Accessed RedsZone
Accessed other web sites
Logged into my bank account
Paid my rent
Sent private messages to my wife
Checked my gmail accounts
Watched YouTube videos
Taken pictures
Downloaded pictures to my laptop
Added appointments to my calendar
Woken up to the alarm clock going off
Played backgammon and chess to pass the time
Tracked Hurricanes
Checked on possible wildfires in California
Gotten a discount at Whole Foods
Paid for parking
Tracked purchases from Amazon
And that's not even everything I do with my phone. I have an app that will take any song that's being played on the radio, search for it and almost instantly return the title and artist of that song, which I can then add to my Amazon play lists.
I have a Kindle app on my tablet which lets me read books.
I can go on and on, but you get the idea. You may not feel you need a smart phone, and that's great. But I wouldn't be so dismissive of them, either.
Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves. -- Carl Sagan (Pale Blue Dot)
I hate that I love my smart phone so much. Damn you technology for being so darn....useful!
You’re confusing a phone being tracked with GPS. I keep my GPS turned off on my smart phone, but your flip phone is being tracked every time it pings a tower. Your phone does the same thing. If you were kidnapped, tossed into a trunk, and dropped off in a landfill in Alabama, they would be able to follow you until your phone went dead. They can get quite precise through triangulation.
You can get a brand new iPhone 6 at Walmart for $149, and enroll through the straight talk plan for a flat fee of $35 with no access fee. I travel around the world and the country and I never have a problem with it.
The main problem with smart phones is that people don’t know how to use them. When you install an app, do not give it access to the GPS or your contacts. Only grant access to the things that absolutely needs. For instance, my guitar tuner app only needs access to the microphone and nothing else. If you use the phone for something like speedway or Kroger, don’t be one of those people that gives your real name or real phone number or real date of birth, and you’ll be fine.
I can’t even measure the number of hours I’ve saved over the last year with my smart phone. I drove up to Chicago yesterday, and in five minutes I booked a room through my Hilton Honors app, rented a car through enterprise, and checked the traffic for the best route on Google maps. Three years ago, I would’ve had to boot up my laptop at home to do that. My mom and dad are in their late 80s, and even they enjoy the iPhone 6 I gave them. Dad uses it to stream music through his stereo system with it. He loves it.
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