In reply to 4cylndrfury:
Duke DID say he was going from an android. Most are 3/4g, but mine is LTE. Chances are? Yes. Is it possible he is running LTE? Sure.
In reply to 4cylndrfury:
Duke DID say he was going from an android. Most are 3/4g, but mine is LTE. Chances are? Yes. Is it possible he is running LTE? Sure.
I'm going to a T-Mobile type of provider that offers a pre-pay type of phone with a removable SIM card. So that way I can have my android or iPhone, then swap the SIM card out into my novelty phone for funny occasions
SyntheticBlinkerFluid wrote:rebelgtp wrote:My uncle had one of these until recently. That thing got signal where ever he went. I've seen some BMWs and Mercs on Craigslist that still have phones in them, can you get those to work again?nepa03focus wrote: Is the fanny pack to carry it In included or extra?This model solves that problem
I saw an 80's Merc 560SL with one of those installed in the console. The SL was hunter green with tan top and interior, by the way. Classic 80s look.
JohnRW1621 wrote: E-911 E911 Phase 2 Wireless network operators must provide the latitude and longitude of callers within 300 meters, within six minutes of a request by a PSAP.[5] Accuracy rates must meet FCC standards on average within any given participating PSAP service area by September 11, 2012 (deferred from September 11, 2008) You can still have your old (non GPS) phone if you have service on it but if you quit service on that handset, the carrier can not re-activate it.
Within 300m is easily doable via network triangulation... no GPS needed.
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