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  1. #1
    Does anyone konw or have a guess how long it takes cingular to offer a
    phone as a refurbished item. I'm looking and waiting for the 8125 to
    come out with a refurbished price tag.




    See More: cingular 8125




  2. #2
    Todd Allcock
    Guest

    Re: Cingular 8125

    At 20 May 2007 06:49:54 -0700 Chris Holub wrote:
    > Hello all,
    > I just got a Cingular 8125 a few weeks ago...
    > Anyway I would like to get a bluetooth GPS sometime but till these was
    > looking to find out if someone has a Location tracking software that
    > uses Cellular towers to triangulate your position to give you your
    > location on a map just like a GPS receiver would.


    No, because your 8125 doesn't have access to that information. Cingular
    triangulates your phone's position; your phone doesn't have access to
    that info, unless Cingular gives (sells) it to you.

    No 3rd party app can extract that info from the network- you'll have to
    ask Cingular if they have a subscription nav service available like
    Verizon does.

    Once you buy a BT GPS unit, of course, you'll be able to use whatever nav
    software is compatible with your device.




  3. #3
    Thurman
    Guest

    Re: Cingular 8125


    "Todd Allcock" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > At 20 May 2007 06:49:54 -0700 Chris Holub wrote:
    >> Hello all,
    >> I just got a Cingular 8125 a few weeks ago...
    >> Anyway I would like to get a bluetooth GPS sometime but till these was
    >> looking to find out if someone has a Location tracking software that
    >> uses Cellular towers to triangulate your position to give you your
    >> location on a map just like a GPS receiver would.

    >
    > No, because your 8125 doesn't have access to that information. Cingular
    > triangulates your phone's position; your phone doesn't have access to
    > that info, unless Cingular gives (sells) it to you.
    >
    > No 3rd party app can extract that info from the network- you'll have to
    > ask Cingular if they have a subscription nav service available like
    > Verizon does.


    You'll have to do some searching, but there was a high school student that
    figured out how to extract the tower ID from the cell phone heartbeat. He
    started building a database of towers by lat-long. It was a daunting task.

    When he entered college, he came up with a better plan, but frankly not
    enough to attract me. He asked people with certain models of PDAs that had
    GPS units to send him the lat-long and tower ID using the software he
    supplied. In exchange for x number of submissions, you would gain access to
    the growing database. All others would have to pay a fee. It was ingenious
    to have the customers do the heavy lifting.

    In about the March issue of Popular Science, the editors promoted a web
    article that would allow you to place any cell phone in test mode. That was
    to allow you to read the tower ID then do a database lookup. It was
    interesting that the web link went to print in the magazine, but the URL
    never appeared. I suspect Homeland Security may have killed the link or the
    cell phone companies threatened to sue.

    Wi-Fi is prevalent enough to use that database for location, but most Wi-Fi
    places have street addresses. Bluetooth GPS units that work with many cell
    phones as well as Smartphones are available for ~$100.

    I still explore ways to determine where you are located between Peaster and
    Paradise, TX.





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