What are the Best Cell Phone Services in the US?
James Hewfanger asks: "Cnet.co.uk has run an article on the five best cell phone services in the UK. These include a text-based service that gets you the number of a licensed cab company in London, Google Maps and Gmail on your phone, a service that can tell what artist and song you're listening to, an online service that backs up all your cell phone contacts and a text-based service that answers any question you can throw at it. What, however, are the five best cell phone services in the US?" Wirefly's cell phone plan comparison tool gives a good up-to-date look of all cell phone plans on the market.
News ...)
Driving Directions
Sports
Travel (flights, hotels,
Movies (via fandango)
Weather
All voice activated with very good support for keypad.
Historically they had free directory assistance.
at times they had traffic information, it's now 511 (run by them)
They run 1-800-555-1212 (toll free directory assistance)
Text anything to 46645. That's the only such service I use.
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...and, again...
Hearing a song and not knowing who sings it or what it's called can be very annoying. Fortunately, Shazam provides a service that lets you hold your phone up to any song playing and it will then text you back the artist and track name in a matter of minutes.
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"How does that work?", I wonder....clever stuff.
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if you have a question that you need answering, AQA is the mobile service for you. AQA, which stands for any question answered, is a text-based service that literally answers any question you can think of. We asked it 'which was better, a CMOS or CCD sensor?' -- amazingly it came back with a half-decent answer.
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In the words of Captain Darling himself, "Clever. Clever. Clever.".
I wonder if it's scalable.
Max.
jajah.com must be one of the most useful services if you are calling internationally. I am calling to Europe routinely from my cell phone for something like 4 cents/min to landline or 17 cents/min to cell, and it could be free if I wasn't lazy. It is an internet-initiated callback service, and they have a java app that lets you to initiate a call directly from the phone, without the access to a computer.
Flurry - (http://www.flurry.com) Mail and news on my phone. Also useful are: Google Local (http://www.google.com/gmm) Maps on my phone. Opera Mini (http://www.opera.com/products/mobile/) Web browsing on my phone. EQO (http://www.eqo.com/) VoIP and IM on my phone. Note that these all work with data services from Cingular and Sprint, but T-Mobile has recently started preventing the use of these services on their phones unless you buy an "unlimited" plan. Verizon either charges a few dollars a month for them or doesn't have them available in the first place. If you have Boost mobile service, you should also check out Loopt (http://loopt.com) - a service that lets you tell your friends where you are.
http://www.flurry.com
E-mail and news on y
1. Deco Mail: most of the new phones now have HTML mail and large libraries of animated emoticons and the like - wifey's has over 1,000, plus lots more downloadable free. They can also be forwarded to PC mail clients and displayed successfully.
2. NaviTime: doesn't just tell you where to go, but copes with which exit from the subway station to get, if a taxi would be faster than trains, even which carriage to board to be closest to the exit!
3. Napster: well, maybe not.
4. iPot: mobile phone in granny's kettle so you can get an email if she doesn't use it for a day.
5. Anti-bullying kiddie phones: junior points camera at bully/perv, sounds the alarm, and parent gets a photo plus GPS coordinates, etc.
Do people not even read the /. summary any more? The question is regarding the top cell-phone based services, not cell-phone carriers.
You put LOTS of effort into that, and your information is both timely and accurate.
However, this article is about third-party cell phone services that you access through your cell phone provider. Sorry there.
'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'