Posts Tagged ‘facebook’

Verizon Wireless Enhances 3G Network in Harford County, Maryland …

Verizon Wireless Enhances 3G Network in Harford County, Maryland By Activating New Cell Site

PawPaw's House: New Cell Phone

New Cell Phone . I got a new cell phone today. One that I can operate. Stolen from this guy. Posted by Pawpaw at 4:48 PM

HTC’s ChaCha shuffles its way through the FCC’s clutches with support for AT&T 3G

We know you’ve all been dreaming of the HTC ChaCha ‘s potential launch on AT&T — well, okay, maybe not, but we’re sure a good handful are for sure — and if you’re lucky, that day could be soon given today’s FCC blessing. In case it’s slipped your mind, HTC’s ChaCha was officially unveiled at Mobile World Congress this year with a 600MHz CPU — that’s been bumped to 800MHz since we first saw it — a very winsome and useful QWERTY keypad, a cute little dedicated Facebook button, and of course AT&T 3G bands are now on tap. Sadly, while the FCC does reveal test results, interesting photos of labs studded with foam cones, and even device sticker placement, they don’t tell us when a device will launch or what it’ll ultimately cost. All that good stuff will be hand delivered to you by us, so keep an eye out and we’ll let you know the whole story as soon as we do. HTC’s ChaCha shuffles its way through the FCC’s clutches with support for AT&T 3G originally appeared on Engadget Mobile on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 15:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

How to find a lost cell phone | ohiores.com

Plus you hear all of the time about how people can monitor you through your cell phone when you upload images to Facebook or Twitter. So why can't you use the same techniques to find your current phone? …

Cell Phone Video Shows Men Raping Girl | Roland S. Martin Blog

Seven men, including five minors, are arrested for recording a rape on their cell phones . CNN's Rafael Romo reports. WATCH: Bookmark on Delicious Digg this post Recommend on Facebook Buzz it up Share on Linkedin share …

HTC ChaCha dances its way onto Vodafone, available now

If you’ve come to the realization that status updates are far more important than actual phone calls, you’re going to be very excited to hear that the HTC ChaCha — the Facebook phone that’s not a ” Facebook Phone ” — is now available on Vodafone starting at the low, low cost of zilch. There’s not a lot to distinguish this phone from other Sense -powered devices, with the exception of some additional social network functionality integrated into the UI. Oh, and there’s that little F button below the keyboard with a light that pulsates anytime you’re doing something that could be shared with the entire world. Top it all off with Gingerbread, an HVGA display on a 2.6-inch screen, 512MB RAM, and a 600MHz CPU, and you’ve got a device that should reasonably handle all your social tendencies. So, boogie on down to the press release after the break or tango over to the source to purchase the ChaCha online. Continue reading HTC ChaCha dances its way onto Vodafone, available now HTC ChaCha dances its way onto Vodafone, available now originally appeared on Engadget Mobile on Thu, 09 Jun 2011 12:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Microsoft, Facebook, RIM, and others write to the FCC in support of AT&T-Mobile merger

FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski has mail. It’s only a page and a paragraph long, but the letter he’s received this week has much gravitas attached to it, coming as it does from a select group of the tech industry’s biggest companies, all of whom are lending their support to AT&T’s proposed acquisition of T-Mobile . Of the eight new proponents of the deal, Microsoft, Facebook and Yahoo form a sub-group of software / web content distributors, whereas Qualcomm, RIM, Avaya, Brocade, and Oracle will have been motivated to speak up because they see the takeover as expanding opportunities to sell their mobile and networking hardware. The entire octet agrees that the melding of AT&T and T-Mobile’s networks into one is a requisite move for broadening mobile broadband availability in the US and for keeping the country competitive with the rest of the world. In their words, “an increasingly robust and efficient wireless network is part of a virtuous innovation cycle.” Virtuous for them, perhaps, but what about consumers faced with an increasingly binary choice of mobile carrier? Who shall protect their virtue? Microsoft, Facebook, RIM, and others write to the FCC in support of AT&T-Mobile merger originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Jun 2011 00:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Tips How to Use Social Networking in Cell Phone

Among mobile users, support application for social networking activity is a popular thing. Among the popular are Facebook, Friendster, My Space, Twitter, Bebo,

The problem with the HTC Freestyle, and why you shouldn’t buy one.

Hello all, I just thought I would drop by and share some words with you about HTC’s Freestyle. For those of you who do not know, the Freestyle is being hailed as the closest a feature phone can get to being a smart phone – withou being a smart phone. It runs on the Brew MP OS and uses the HTC Sense UI, which is very easy on the eyes and smooth to play around with.     The device comes packed with eye-catching features that make this phone look amazing on paper – especially to those who want a lot of the bells and whistles of a smart phone without a forced (and not unlimited) data plan. Some of these features include a 3.2MP camera, Friend Stream (a social update aggregator including Twitter and Facebook), many different widgets to stick to your home screens, and a surprisingly competent web browser.   But the fun stops there. This phone is so ridden with bugs and sketchy behavior that I shelfed it for a Samsung Eternity II after two weeks of use. You may have seen the mostly positive video reviews of this phone, but I assure you that had these reviewers used the phone for a longer amount of time, they would have not given it such praise. So, without further delay, here is a list of the problems I have discovered.   ———-   1. Don’t have mobile email ($5/mo)? Well, say goodbye to social sharing services like Twitpic or Tumblr that require you to SMS an email address. Not only does this phone prevent you from SEEING any email contact in your address book when sending an SMS, but it rubs salt in the wounds by suddenly matching the name of the contact when you manually enter the email address. In a nutshell, it will let you send SMS messages to email addresses, but it will hide any email contacts from you until you enter the whole address manually. This limitation literally serves no purpose but to convince people to pay an extra $5.00 a month to use all of their phone’s BASIC features – Features that are fully available on every other AT&T phone I have used.   2. There is no subject line available in SMS messages at all. This once again is probably tied to mobile email to prevent people from finding an alternative. The problem is, once again, I have never seen this on a phone in my life until now. This also prevents you from sharing comments with your photos on sites such as Tumblr and Twitpic, as they rely on the subject line for this input and typing your comments in the body yields no results.   3. Friend Stream is broken. Facebook works, intermittently, but last week it didn’t update for four days. Twitter does not work at all. Anyone who has tried to log in through my phone has received an “Invalid username/password” error and it has never worked.   4. Texts often arrive 3-5 hours late, and with as many as six duplicate messages. I checked the bill online and each duplicate text appears to have been counted but I could be wrong. This means that you will be financially destroyed if you do not have unlimited texting, and you will hate everything about your phone.   5. Text message and voice mail indicators do not properly refresh and will often tell you that you have a new notification that you have checked half a dozen times.   6. The phone frequently crashes fully when performing simple tasks such as browsing Twitter’s mobile site.   7. The web browser will give you a 404 error approximately 1 out of every 8 times you click on a link, especially if you are moving from a mobile site to a full site. So get used to constantly having to refresh pages to get them to load properly.   8. The weather will only update manually and has no option to put it on a schedule.   9. Text messages will come through with no indication whatsoever – or new message notification. They appear in your inbox as if you read them already. I have missed many messages because of this.   10. The HTC Browser seems to be incapable of keeping you logged in to any website. This means you have to do a lot of extra logging in every time you want to check everything online.   ———-   These are just the problems I discovered in the first two weeks of use, and I completely gave up on it. I see that other people out there are having problems with this cell phone, but if we want it fixed we have to speak up! It’s a very expensive device for what it actually is, and I think we deserve to have a phone that actually does what it advertises itself as able to do – or at the very LEAST, make it work properly as a texting phone.   If you have this phone and are just as disappointed by its gaping flaws as I am, please chime in and let everyone know what your problems are. HTC needs to know that we want an update and we want one soon. They may not read this forum, but any voice will travel on the internet. The device itself is very sleek and well-built, and I loved it until I realized how crippled it was. Pound-for-pound, it’s the worst phone I’ve had in its current state and needs a firmware update immediately.

FaceNiff makes Facebook hacking on Android too easy – Cell Phones …

Jun. 2, 2011 – Before you connect to that open public Wi-Fi network and log in to Facebook, you should know there's a new app on the loose that makes it easy for a user to.