This suggests that altitude might be something to check as well,
though as someone else pointed out that's a little late to enable
flight mode :)
Why do you always think of planes when speaking of altitude? What about
Mountain-climbing? Paragliding? Deltaplanes? Private Ultralight-Planes?
While I do find most of the GPS based ideas intriguing I do have one comment.
Power usage!
I wonder if you have realised that the GPS consumes large quantities of current.
(45 mW according to
On 30 Jul 2007, at 16:45, Visti Andresen wrote:
While I do find most of the GPS based ideas intriguing I do have
one comment.
Power usage!
Then you simply have an update timer. Tell the phone to update it's
position at a configurable time period, say every 5 minutes.
On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 16:59:51 +0100
Ian Stirling [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Visti Andresen wrote:
While I do find most of the GPS based ideas intriguing I do have one
comment.
Power usage!
I wonder if you have realised that the GPS consumes large quantities of
Visti Andresen wrote:
On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 16:59:51 +0100
Ian Stirling [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Visti Andresen wrote:
While I do find most of the GPS based ideas intriguing I do have one comment.
Power usage!
I wonder if you have realised that the GPS consumes large quantities
On 30 Jul 2007, at 17:54, Visti Andresen wrote:
But does a GPS not require large amounts of time to get a new fix?
Hot startup 12s, average
Warm startup 38s, average
Cold startup 60s, average
(random data from http://www.alibaba.com/catalog/11694061/
Bluetooth_GPS_Receiver.html)
Depends
You're confusing GSM (Global Systems Mobile) with the gsm codec in
Asterisk. They have different meanings. The codecs used by your mobile
phone are not the same as the gsm codec in Asterisk.
Shachar Shemesh wrote:
Ian Stirling wrote:
There are 2 D/A, 2 A/D flexibly routed, and one D/A that
Michael Welter wrote:
You're confusing GSM (Global Systems Mobile) with the gsm codec in
Asterisk.
I find that highly likely. I'm pretty new to Asterisk.
They have different meanings. The codecs used by your mobile phone
are not the same as the gsm codec in Asterisk.
But it does use some
Shachar Shemesh wrote:
Michael Welter wrote:
You're confusing GSM (Global Systems Mobile) with the gsm codec in
Asterisk.
I find that highly likely. I'm pretty new to Asterisk.
They have different meanings. The codecs used by your mobile phone
are not the same as the gsm codec in
Mark,
I love the idea! And maybe a feature like dumping the call to a BT headset
device if present. I am curious, I assume there would be a config option or
something, because how would it tell if you are the driver? A preference
per contact could be used as well. ie. I don't mind if my
Mark Eichin wrote:
Use case:
When I'm walking around, I'll answer the phone. When I'm driving, I
won't (one phonecall == two beers worth of distraction)... but am
willing to pull over if the caller thinks it's important enough.
I shouldn't have to *tell* the phone what mode I'm in:
Mark Eichin wrote:
Use case:
When I'm walking around, I'll answer the phone. When I'm driving, I
won't (one phonecall == two beers worth of distraction)... but am
willing to pull over if the caller thinks it's important enough.
I shouldn't have to *tell* the phone what mode I'm in:
On Saturday 28 July 2007 21:17, Eric van Horssen wrote:
Something like Asterix (don't know the full possibilities of Asterix
though)
He was a character in popular French cartoon by Goscinny and Uderzo, he could
do lots and lots of things... He probably would have used Asterisk if it had
Some friends at work and I were talking about a speed-sensitive
configuration option, too--one that selects ringing profiles.
For example, when you're at a speed greater than, say, 20 mph, more than
likely you're in a noisy environment and you'd want your phone to ring
slightly louder. When
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