* Ben Burdette <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [070210 19:47]:
>
> >>
> >>Unfortunatly, It looks to me like T-Mobile is currently not interested in
> >>letting its pre-paid customers use GPRS to go anywhere outside their Silly
> >>T-Zones walled garden.
> >
> >Let me guess.
> >This contains such things as wea
On Sat, 2007-02-10 at 23:04 -0700, Shawn Rutledge wrote:
> > > Unfortunatly, It looks to me like T-Mobile is currently not interested in
> > > letting its pre-paid customers use GPRS to go anywhere outside their Silly
> > > T-Zones walled garden.
> >
> > Let me guess.
> > This contains such things
> Unfortunatly, It looks to me like T-Mobile is currently not interested in
> letting its pre-paid customers use GPRS to go anywhere outside their Silly
> T-Zones walled garden.
Let me guess.
This contains such things as weather reports, news headlines, ringtones, ...
All available for a small pe
You should not have any problem getting GPRS to work as long as you are using
their regular service. AFAIK, only their PREPAID service has the access to
GPRS restricted.
-Jason
On Saturday 10 February 2007 12:40, Ben Burdette wrote:
> >> Unfortunatly, It looks to me like T-Mobile is currently
Unfortunatly, It looks to me like T-Mobile is currently not
interested in
letting its pre-paid customers use GPRS to go anywhere outside their
Silly
T-Zones walled garden.
Let me guess.
This contains such things as weather reports, news headlines,
ringtones, ...
All available for a small
Ian Stirling writes:
>
>In most cases, the fact that you're going past the store is pretty
>irrelevant to the need for groceries.
Or, for most of us on the way home, the fact that you weren't going
to be near the store has nothing to do with the fact that you are now
going by the store...
_
kkr wrote:
Le vendredi 09 février 2007 à 20:33 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] a
écrit :
For example, imagine an application that uses GPS location information to
determine your car's proximity to your favorite grocery store on your way
home. When you get to within 5 miles of the store, your Neo uses
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mary...
I've been looking into this issue in a related way.
One of the biggest opportunities for the Neo will be writing mobile
oriented data retreval and sync applications using gps/GPRS.
For example, imagine an application that uses GPS location information to
det
On Wed, 7 Feb 2007, Mark McClellan wrote:
On 2/6/07, Ben Burdette <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
So, I'm thinking seriously about getting a neo1973 when they become
available. I called the local T Mobile office and asked them whether I
could borrow a phone to see how the signal strength is wher
Ben,
A few years ago I posed the same question to a T-Mobile sales guy. He handed
me a working demo phone to take around for a few days. I took it back the
next day and signed up.
I wouldn't get the cheapest phone they offer. Remember the first edition of
the OpenMoko device is geared for develo
On Tue, Feb 06, 2007 at 06:25:30PM -0700, Ben Burdette wrote:
> So, I'm thinking seriously about getting a neo1973 when they become
> available. I called the local T Mobile office and asked them whether I
> could borrow a phone to see how the signal strength is where I live.
> They said I coul
On Wed, 2007-02-07 at 08:41 -0700, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
> I'm curious -- which one do you use? Were you able to get just a sim
> card from them, or did they insist on "giving" you a phone?
They insisted on giving you the phone and looking at it you would need
to keep the phone in order to maintain
Redvers Davies writes:
>
>The one that I have does use a SIMcard and they roam onto some GSM
>network which it doesn't identify. My guess is certainly cingular since
>its the only GSM network available in my area[0].
I'm curious -- which one do you use? Were you able to get just a sim
card from
If you are in the UK, Tescos do a cheap pay as you go SIM;
http://www.tesco.com/mobilenetwork/shop/?page=simcards
Maybe WalMart do the same in the US?
There are various pay-as-you-go services in the US. $20 (10UKP) will
buy you a GSM cellphone and 60 minutes of talk time (With no ID or
c
Tmobile has a fairly acurate street by street coverage map on their web site.
On 2/6/07, Ben Burdette <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
So, I'm thinking seriously about getting a neo1973 when they become
available. I called the local T Mobile office and asked them whether I
could borrow a phone to see
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>If you are in the UK, Tescos do a cheap pay as you go SIM;
>http://www.tesco.com/mobilenetwork/shop/?page=simcards
>
>Maybe WalMart do the same in the US?
Good question. I know they sell pay-as-you-go phones...
___
OpenMoko c
On Wed, 2007-02-07 at 10:05 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> If you are in the UK, Tescos do a cheap pay as you go SIM;
> http://www.tesco.com/mobilenetwork/shop/?page=simcards
> Maybe WalMart do the same in the US?
There are various pay-as-you-go services in the US. $20 (10UKP) will
buy you a G
If you are in the UK, Tescos do a cheap pay as you go SIM;
http://www.tesco.com/mobilenetwork/shop/?page=simcards
Maybe WalMart do the same in the US?
Al
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Graham Auld writes:
>What country are you in?
>
>If it's UK then you shouldn't have much of a problem with signal unless
>you're in the wilds of Scotland :-)
>Most if not all of the network providers also provide sim only options for
>contracts or pay as you go services, not usually heavily adverti
What country are you in?
If it's UK then you shouldn't have much of a problem with signal unless
you're in the wilds of Scotland :-)
Most if not all of the network providers also provide sim only options for
contracts or pay as you go services, not usually heavily advertised but
avaliable none the
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