Blog Archives

splash Intense 5400mAh External Battery Pack for iPhone 4 4G, iPhone 3G 3GS, iPod Touch (1G 2G 3G), Motorola Droid X Eris, HTC Android Phones (Evo, Incredible, G1, Nexus One), Blackberry (9630, 9700, 9550, 9800)

splash Intense 5400mAh External Battery Pack for iPhone 4 4G, iPhone 3G 3GS, iPod Touch (1G 2G 3G), Motorola Droid X Eris, HTC Android Phones (Evo, Incredible, G1, Nexus One), Blackberry (9630, 9700, 9550, 9800)

  • Compatibility: iPhone (1st Generation, 3G, 3GS, iPhone 4 4G), iPod (Touch 1G, 2G, 3G, Classic), Blackberry (9630, 9530, 9550, 9700)
  • Packs in punch – the splash Intense packs in more punch than you would expect from this sleek and slim-profile device.
  • Design: Compact, stylish, and light-weight.
  • Convenient rechargeable battery allowing you to always have a battery charging backup when you are away from a AC outlet
  • Contents: O2 Intense device, retractable USB cable, 7 adapters for different phones (iPhone’s 30-pin connector, Mini-USB, Micro-USB, Sony, Nokia, Samsung)

Stylish, compact, convenient, powerful…a must-have accessory for your smartphone – introducing the splash Intense. The splash Intense is a portable battery pack that you can use to charge your smartphones on the go. The tiny device packs in a solid 5400mAh power, which should provide mutiple charges for your phone. The sleek design allows you to carry the Intense with you in your pocket or in your purse without it taking up much space. An absolute must-have accessory for savvy smartphone users

Price: $ 49.95

USB Cable+Car charger+ Wall Home Charger For Apple iPhone 3G 3GS 4 4G 4S ipod
US $0.01 (0 Bid)
End Date: Wednesday May-23-2012 12:26:20 PDT
Bid now | Add to watch list

Popularity: 1% [?]

AT&T Deal to Let Users Unlock Phones, But Not iPhone

AT&T Deal to Let Users Unlock Phones, But Not iPhone
AT&T has reached a class-action settlement that will let customers unlock phones tied to the carrier – though that does not include Apple’s iPhone, with which AT&T has an exclusive contract.

Read more on PC Magazine

Popularity: 1% [?]

Discovery Of The Health Issues On Cell Phones

Part of the radio waves emitted by a mobile telephone handset is absorbed by the human head. The radio waves emitted by a GSM handset, (Global System for Mobile Communications) can have a peak power of 2 watts. An analogue phone has a maximum transmit power of 3.6 watts.

Other digital mobile technologies, such as CDMA and TDMA, use lower output power, typically below 1 watt. The maximum power output from a GPS tracking cell phone is regulated by the mobile phone standard it is following and by the regulatory agencies in each country.

Swedish researchers from the University Lund, Salford, Brun, Perrson, Eberhardt and Malmgren, have studied the effects of microwave radiation on the rat brain. They found a leakage of albumin into brain via a permeated blood-brain barrier.

The rate at which radiation is absorbed by the human body is measured by the Specific Absorption Rate (SAR), and its maximum levels for modern handsets have been set by governmental regulating agencies in many countries.

Some users of mobile handsets have reported feeling several unspecific symptoms during and after its use; ranging from burning and tingling sensations in the skin of the head and extremities, fatigue, sleep disturbances, dizziness, loss of mental attention, reaction times and memory retentiveness, headaches, malaise, tachycardia (heart palpitations), to disturbances of the digestive system all of which can be attributed to psychological stress.

Although research is still undergoing and it’s not entirely clear what the affects of GPS cell phone tracker use will have, people continue to use it on a grand scale. With research they hope to conclude the affects cell phones use has in the near future.

When you call 911 from a land phone, even if you don’t recognize where you are, the 911 system is able to locate you and send help as needed. Your landline telephone is connected to the lines on the poles which illicits a computer in the dispatch center indicate the number and address of the phone you’re using.

Cell Phones Don’t Work the Same

When you dispatch a 911 call on a mobile phone GPS tracking, you are sending signals through the air. The tower that picks up your phone’s signal may or may not be near. Unless you are able to tell the 911 dispatcher where you are at, it may be very hard for them to locate you.

If you happen to connect to a 911 call center that is not local, they may not be able to help you as quickly as they will crave to contact the 911 service providers in your area, thereby slowing the dispatching of help to the caller.

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has required that all wireless carriers be able to pinpoint your location for the 911 dispatchers, but the rule is coming in phases and there are plenty of exceptions.

When you call 911 from a cell phone, the call often lands in a regional center. A call-taker in a far- distant city or county may answer your call. To get help to you, there are two pieces of information the call-taker requires to understand immediately:

1. Tell the call-taker which city you’re calling from first. They can forward your call to the right center if crave be.

2. Tell the call-taker what type of emergency you have. This will let them be able to inform the other centers of the nature of such an emergency. Giving priority to serious situations first.

Dispatch centers may vary from one center to another, with the right information, the call-taker will transfer you to the right center.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Know More About The Evolution Of Cellular Phones

We’re come a long way from the first cell phones. The concept isn’t a new one; in fact in 1947 Douglas H.Ring and W. Rae Young, Bell Labs engineers, proposed hexagonal cells for mobile phones. The real launch of the first portable phones was in the early 80’s. At that time only the very wealthy or well to do individuals had them.

They were very big and heavy. Not something to be carried in your pant pocket or purse, this was something that weighed a few pounds. As big as they were though, they didn’t have a clear sound and using them was a hassle. At first, all were designed for permanent installation in vehicles otherwise known as a ear phone?

Some of these bulky units were soon converted for use as ‘transportable’ phones the size of a briefcase. Motorola introduced the first truly portable, handheld phone. The first digital cellular phone call was made in the United States in 1990. They shrank considerably.

Cell phones used to be just analog phones, with the sole purpose of providing the consumer with the capability of making and receiving voice calls while on the road.

As technology has advanced so have the capabilities of the LG cellphone. They don’t just send and receive calls at once; they are capable of text messaging, emailing, taking pictures and video clips. The sizes have gotten small yet their abilities have improved.

As we continue to advance, so will the abilities of GPS cell phone tracker. In the next few years, cell phone networks will move data at several megabits per second, and will coexist with WiMax, Wi-Fi, and, for TV, DVB-H or MediaFLO.

There is some question on where and when a good time to use your free mobile phone tracking is and when it’s not appropriate. Here are some things to remember as advocate ed by business and etiquette professionals.

1. Never take a personal mobile call during a business meeting. This includes interviews and meetings with co-workers or subordinates.

2. Maintain at least a 10-foot zone from anyone while talking.

3. Never talk in elevators, libraries, museums, restaurants, cemeteries, theaters, dentist or doctor waiting rooms, places of worship, auditoriums or other enclosed public spaces, such as hospital emergency rooms or buses.

And don? have any emotional conversations in public – ever. People don’t need to accept your business and they don? care to understand if you are having an argument with your boyfriend.

4. Don’t use loud and annoying ring tones that destroy concentration and eardrums.

5. Never multi-task by making calls while shopping, banking, and waiting in line on conduct other personal business.

6. Keep all cellular congress brief and to the point.

7. Use an earpiece in high-traffic or noisy locations. That lets you hear the amplification, or how loud you sound at the other end, so you can modulate your voice.

8. Tell callers when you’re talking on a mobile, so they can anticipate distractions or disconnections.

9. Demand quiet zones and phone-free areas at work and in public venues, like the quiet cars on the Amtrak Metroliner.

10. Inform everyone in your mobile address book that you’re just adopted the new rules for mobile manners. Ask them to do likewise.

Remembering to be courteous of those around you when you are on the phone is a good place to start.

When talking on the phone in public leave your personal information out of the conversation and keep your conversations for necessity purposes only.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Powered by Yahoo! Answers