Expect an Oolite tune made with this soon

Now I can really compose anywhere
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Stcf_8H_qVM
Moderators: winston, another_commander, Cody
Luckily I have the 3G and not the 4Commander McLane wrote:Now if you also could make phone calls with the iPhone, it would almost be a perfect phone...
Hey – now that Skype runs in the background, that isn’t a problem any more. :-)Commander McLane wrote:Now if you also could make phone calls with the iPhone, it would almost be a perfect phone... :oops:
No kidding.Commander McLane wrote:Now if you also could make phone calls with the iPhone, it would almost be a perfect phone...
No, it isn't. Just go and buy the cheapest Nokia phone you can find. That's what I've been doing for the last six years, first in Africa, now in Europe. You can use it to speak and for sms, which are the two things I want to do with a cell phone.Cmdr Wyvern wrote:"Look pal, I have a PC for internet, and a nice camera for shooting pictures. I don't need all that in a damned phone, alright? I just need it to be a phone. Make and take calls, nothing more, nothing less. Is that too much to ask?"
Apparently, it is.
SMS is a bit dated IMO. Thats where you have a phone. I synchronized the mail accounts and voila.Commander McLane wrote:No, it isn't. Just go and buy the cheapest Nokia phone you can find. That's what I've been doing for the last six years, first in Africa, now in Europe. You can use it to speak and for sms, which are the two things I want to do with a cell phone.Cmdr Wyvern wrote:"Look pal, I have a PC for internet, and a nice camera for shooting pictures. I don't need all that in a damned phone, alright? I just need it to be a phone. Make and take calls, nothing more, nothing less. Is that too much to ask?"
Apparently, it is.
Also saves you a lot of money.
Well, in the past years SMS was the fastest, most reliable, and by far the cheapest means of communication for me and everybody I knew. In eastern Africa I was always trying to not use my phone for talking, because it is no fun if you have—as a rule—to dial at least four times in order to establish a connection at all, which is then so crappy that you understand—at the very best—forty percent of what the person at the other end is saying.pagroove wrote:SMS is a bit dated IMO.
Over here in the USA, it's close to impossible to get a phone that's just a phone, except for landline phones.Commander McLane wrote:No, it isn't. Just go and buy the cheapest Nokia phone you can find. That's what I've been doing for the last six years, first in Africa, now in Europe. You can use it to speak and for sms, which are the two things I want to do with a cell phone.Cmdr Wyvern wrote:"Look pal, I have a PC for internet, and a nice camera for shooting pictures. I don't need all that in a damned phone, alright? I just need it to be a phone. Make and take calls, nothing more, nothing less. Is that too much to ask?"
Apparently, it is.
Also saves you a lot of money.
That's what it was like in the UK at first, on the old analogue networks. Now it's all about selling contracts because people seem not to be able to work out how much they are actually paying for a phone over 18 months. It's the same with the laptops they give away with phone contracts, you end up with an emachines netbook for a contract value of about 4-500 pounds. Buying the phone alone costs about the same or sometimes even more.Commander McLane wrote:I was a little shocked to find out that German phone companies charge their customers for receiving calls.pagroove wrote:SMS is a bit dated IMO.
Of course, if you deliver yourself to the wolves...Cmdr Wyvern wrote:Over here in the USA, it's close to impossible to get a phone that's just a phone, except for landline phones.Commander McLane wrote:No, it isn't. Just go and buy the cheapest Nokia phone you can find. That's what I've been doing for the last six years, first in Africa, now in Europe. You can use it to speak and for sms, which are the two things I want to do with a cell phone.Cmdr Wyvern wrote:"Look pal, I have a PC for internet, and a nice camera for shooting pictures. I don't need all that in a damned phone, alright? I just need it to be a phone. Make and take calls, nothing more, nothing less. Is that too much to ask?"
Apparently, it is.
Also saves you a lot of money.
But ask for a cellphone that doesn't have a billion features that you'll never need, and they treat you like some kind of moron and crank the hard sell up to full blast. The reason? Money; As in vacuum as much of it out of your wallet as possible. Selling you a phone that's just a phone puts the brakes on their runaway greed machine.
Man, the greedy buggers really make me ill.What happened to the customer is always right?
That really only happens when you leave the country with your German SIM card and receive calls. Within Germany I haven't heard of this practice. At least not in the past 10 or so years.Commander McLane wrote:I was a little shocked to find out that German phone companies charge their customers for receiving calls
Yeah. I never even spent a second thinking about a contract. In Tanzania, where I got used to mobile phones, only pre-paidexists. You buy a phone, then you buy a simcard, and then you buy airtime whenever you need it. You may even have multiple simcards from several networks, and switch between them (usually using the same phone; if you can afford it, you may have more than one phone), depending on which network has the best coverage in the area you're in (bonus points if you manage to get the same phone number from the various companies).docwild wrote:That's what it was like in the UK at first, on the old analogue networks. Now it's all about selling contracts because people seem not to be able to work out how much they are actually paying for a phone over 18 months. It's the same with the laptops they give away with phone contracts, you end up with an emachines netbook for a contract value of about 4-500 pounds. Buying the phone alone costs about the same or sometimes even more.Commander McLane wrote:I was a little shocked to find out that German phone companies charge their customers for receiving calls.pagroove wrote:SMS is a bit dated IMO.
The only thing it proves, as far as I can tell, is that the phones cost pennies to make and everyone who buys them is getting ripped off and laughed at.
It's depressing really.
Yes, my provider also only charges in case I am abroad. However, that meant that when somebody from Tanzania called me for about four minutes when I was in Switzerland last week, I was charged more than 5 euros, which I found hefty. If I would have used my Tanzanian phone and number, I wouldn't have paid a single cent. And the cost for the Tanzanian caller would have been exactly the same. Which means that my German network provider is making a nice fat profit where Tanzanian network providers don't, although they may even belong to the same mother company.maik wrote:That really only happens when you leave the country with your German SIM card and receive calls. Within Germany I haven't heard of this practice. At least not in the past 10 or so years.Commander McLane wrote:I was a little shocked to find out that German phone companies charge their customers for receiving calls