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Polite Cell Phones

yEvb0 writes "Researchers at Motorola and Carnegie Mellon University are developing more polite cell phones. Strategies include programming the ringer to turn on and off according to the time of day, monitoring sound light levels to determine if the owner is a movie theater or talking to his boss, and even letting callers decide whether they'd like to interrupt based on this information."

5 of 292 comments (clear)

  1. It's Called 'Vibrate' by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Set your phone to vibrate. It's been working for me for years. Non-invasive when doing anything in my daily routine.

    Is there really a reason I should have to enter my schedule into my phone? Because it's not going to happen.

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    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:It's Called 'Vibrate' by LinuxHam · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Not to mention something Nextel has had for years. If I put my regularly scheduled meetings in my datebook, I can program the phone to switch to vibrate on its own, shut off the two-way radio feature, and even decide who in my phonebook is allowed to ring through, just for the length of the meeting. Its really an excellent feature, and I love it.

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      Intelligent Life on Earth
  2. They should research by endrue · · Score: 5, Insightful

    a polite human being.
    Seriously folks! How hard is it to turn off the ringer? Are we so daft these days that our phones have to be polite for us?

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    I meta-moderate because I care.
  3. Why can't the movie theatre _tell_ the phone by wfmcwalter · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Rather than guessing we're in a movie theatre (which is what this amounts to) or places using cell-phone blockers, why can't someone implement a simple scheme to _tell_ the phone not to ring?

    Of those phones which do ring in an inappropriate place, the owners of the great majority have simply forgotten to turn their phone off (they're forgetful, not sociopathic). Movie theatres, concert halls, libraries and other please-keep-quiet places could have short-range radio equipment inside which sent a "this is a quiet zone" signal. You'd program your phone (and it would come programmed by default) that when it was receiving that signal it would go onto the vibrate-only ring preference. When the signal was lost, it would revert to your default. So when you entered, and when you left, there would be no need to remember to set the phone correctly (the nagging ads always remind me to turn my phone off, but very often I forget at the end and leave my phone off for the remainder of the day). Similarly noisy places like train stations and airport concourses could broadcast a "this is a noisy environment", which your phone would typically interpret to mean that it should use a loud, shrill ringtone.

    There >are Phones should, incidentally, have an "answer with hold" button. So a doctor in the movies whose phone rang (silently) could take it out, notice that it's the hospital's number, and push "answer with hold". The caller would get a short recorded message saying "this person is aware of your call, and will be with you shortly - please hold" - that way the doctor can take the call, but doesn't have to talk into the phone until they've walked into the theatre lobby, where they can take the phone off hold and talk.

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    ## W.Finlay McWalter ## http://www.mcwalter.org ##
  4. Re:Inside my pocket by meringuoid · · Score: 5, Funny
    It's dark and there is the sound of rattling change.

    What? Grues use currency these days, do they?

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.