Aug 10, 2007 by volleyballer<3 | Posted in Cell Phones & Plans
I get a new cell here in a month or so. I have Cingular/AT&T, and none of their phones are appealing to me. I demand a good, stylish phone. Does anyone know of a good phone that they betrothed, that is made my AT&T? I have heard bad things about the Razrs, what are your thought? Pls answer both questions if possible. Thanks!!!
and no iPhone...i liking...but too expensive
The LG CU500V is a complimentary phone with all the bells and whistles.
| Aug 10, 2007
How can I get someones new cell phone from their old one?
May 11, 2009 by Ryan D | Posted in Cell Phones & Plans
I positive if someone changed their landline phone number if they moved, it will be easy to get because the operator will most of the time give it to you and that information. But what about a cell phone? If someone important to me changes their cell phone and I dont have their new number but if I have their old cell, is there a way I could get the new one? Would the smoothie have that?
Sometimes I would get an automatic response if its a landline phone with the new number or if it is unlisted, it will say its been disconnected.
You have to get the covey from the person important to you. Mobile numbers are protected by privacy laws. There's no directory, operators don't even have them to give them out and there's no recording saying the horde you called has been changed to . . .
evilattorney | May 11, 2009
What are the currently popular, new cell phones?
Aug 23, 2009 by Danielle | Posted in Cell Phones & Plans
I have to get a new cell phone because my Sony Ericsson W580i is extraordinarily messed up. I was wondering what the latest, most popular cell phones are currently.
It depends on who you have your agreement with, and when it expires. I recently switched to AT&T, who has great service in the area in which I live. I got a Rugby--I adulation it. I don't need the iPHON at the price it would cost to operate it --I like lots of features but some shit on ALL phones doesn't need to be there, and there's a lot more on the iPHON that doesn't. But I am only on my 2nd phone in 5 years, too. My old one was still well-made, but I was with Qwest, so my old phone will soon be obsolete because of their merger with Verizon, who does not have virtuousness service in my area. I never checked Sprint, and sort of wish I would have, because I think they have some straight phones and good service everywhere. I think T-Mobile is good, too.
| Aug 24, 2009
Lessons from New Product Launches--Cell Zone to iPad
Joan Schneider and Julie Hired hall of Schneider Associates, coauthors of the HBR article "Why Most Product Launches Fade," explain how to ...
Acer unveils Liquid, a new Snapdragon smartphone – Cell Phones ...
by John Brownlee
It seems like we’ve been waiting forever for a Snapdragon-based Android phone, which would for good topple b reduce piercing-clarification video to smartphones uninterrupted Google’s operating system, but yesterday, Acer in the end scratched that yen by confirming their upcoming Fluid phone. Now the details are start to juicily hole, and the phone looks actual in specs and convention interface, if not in a rather cut-price looking mortal forge.
The arms is about what we expected: The Acer Flowing is, of undoubtedly, unceasing a 1GHz Snapdragon processor underclocked down to 768MHz. It sports a WVGA capacitive touchscreen measuring up to 3.5 inches. There’s also a five megapixel camera, 256MB of RAM, WiFi, 3G and a 1,350 mAH battery that should suck up a modest debt and then puke it slowly.
It’s the convention cartridge Acer has slapped on top of Bright that unusually snines, though. Using a customized adaptation of Android 1.6 Donut, the Acer Bright has a more common networking centric contacts system, much like the Palm Pre or the HTC Common sense. In appendix to the friend direction system, Acer has designed their own widgets, as well as a new dialer, a assignment managing app switcher, a new multimedia dashboard and a skinner applications drawer.
All well and nobility, and the phone looks stimulating, but Acer is still unexperienced in the confines of smartphones, and there’s unhesitatingly some missteps underlying the Translucent’s whisk coating. In uniting. the Clear has no set free archaic or consequence in America yet… and who knows whether Acer will be proficient to grapple with the bloody spectrum of American shipper exclusivity deals.