Sujet : Re: Disabling answering the phone.
De : not (at) *nospam* telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd Kev)
Groupes : comp.miscDate : 14. Apr 2024, 00:27:23
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Ausics - https://newsgroups.ausics.net
Message-ID : <661b14da@news.ausics.net>
References : 1 2 3
User-Agent : tin/2.0.1-20111224 ("Achenvoir") (UNIX) (Linux/2.4.31 (i586))
D <
nospam@example.net> wrote:
On Fri, 12 Apr 2024, John McCue wrote:
Sylvia Else <sylvia@email.invalid> wrote:
How did we get to the point where one has to do a web search just to be
able to answer the infernal device?
>
No kidding! Also I have a hard time hanging up the "smart"
phone. These phones do not make using it as a phone easy.
I am not far from tossing it out the window and going to a
dumb phone.
Do it! I haven't had a smartphone for about 5 years or so and I love it!
The highest price I pay is not being able to get ?ber taxis so I pay about
3x the price with a regular taxi
I never started using a smartphone, and I recently ran into my
first financial disadvantage resulting from that. I got a
Mastercard gift card as part of a promotion, which I'd made a
deliberate effort to obtain, and it turns out I need a smartphone
app to activate it. Old forum threads suggest that there used to be
a way to do it on their mastercardgift.com.au website, but that
seems to have gone because of course everyone has a smartphone now.
To be fair, so far I've only established that it can't be used
online without setting it up in the app, I still need to find an
appropriate time and place to try using it in-store.
But I'm still sticking to dumb phones. Only I stuffed up trying to
find a cheap 4G one with good reception - it won't talk to the
telco I use. Previous network-locked phones didn't care whether the
network they were locked to was accessed via an account with a
reseller using that phone network, but apparantly they've been
silently shifting the goalposts.
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