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  1. #1
    Larry
    Guest
    http://www.motorola.com/consumer/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=
    6842e59e1572d010VgnVCM1000008206b00aRCRD&show=productHome

    M800/M900 carphones and BAGphones with SERIOUS transmitters and MANLY
    phones for emergency services, government agents, gas/oil/industry and
    other MEN who need a serious, no-bull**** cellphone with serious range.

    GPS - yep
    AMPS - yep...3 watts!
    Bluetooth - yep
    1X (only) with Email/FAX/SMS/internet with Motorola Phone tools on your
    MANLY, ruggedized, milspec laptop

    Available on Alltel CDMA/AMPS and ATT GSM (which isn't listed on the
    Motorola website's list of supporters in the boondocks and Alaska.

    Larry
    --
    FINALLY a MANLY new cellphone for the BIG BOYS!
    I'm still betting AMPS will be with us for many years...
    (without Verizon, of course)....tsk, tsk.
    1-800-ALLTEL7 during daytime business hours.



    See More: Alltel and ATT get new MANLY phones!




  2. #2
    Larry
    Guest

    Re: Alltel and ATT get new MANLY phones!

    Larry <[email protected]> wrote in news:Xns98EF41999872noonehomecom@
    208.49.80.253:

    > M800/M900 carphones and BAGphones with SERIOUS transmitters and MANLY
    > phones for emergency services, government agents, gas/oil/industry and
    > other MEN who need a serious, no-bull**** cellphone with serious range.
    >
    >


    Looks like Telus in Canada has come on board, too!
    http://www.telusmobility.com/bc/pcs/...ag_phone.shtml

    Larry
    --
    Manly phones for REAL men...



  3. #3
    Larry
    Guest

    Re: Alltel and ATT get new MANLY phones!

    Larry <[email protected]> wrote in news:Xns98EF7082C595Anoonehomecom@
    208.49.80.253:

    > M800/M900 carphones and BAGphones


    UPDATE - I bought one! ALLTEL PRICE FOR EXISTING CUSTOMERS IS $US99.99
    with 2-year contract or $149.99 with 1-year contract! I was prepared to
    hear $399 or $499. This phone is first class Motorola cop equipment not
    cheap consumer crap. $99.99 is a bargain!

    OK, the bad news....It's NOT a pocket phone. The large (HUGE?) part that
    looks like a big candy bar phone does NOT detach and become a pocket
    phone as I thought. It's mounted solid to the main frame with 4 heavy
    posts and connected with a big control cable to the beast under it. The
    privacy handset, which activates and disconnects the MASSIVE 3x5" mobile
    speaker, speaking through a grille cloth in the top end of the very nice
    NYLON case, switches off Speakerphone, which comes on by default when you
    press any key to answer a call...or...call out without removing the
    privacy handset from its cradle. Speakerphone by default, private phone
    when you pickup the handset. This may not be as bad a flaw as I thought.
    I left "The Beast" sitting on the seat in my car and took just my
    Motorola Bluetooth headset paired with it into lunch at a fav diner. The
    Beast was plugged into the cigarette lighter socket, giving the 2.5AH
    lead-acid camcorder gelcell it runs off of available for $12, not $95, in
    any Walmart, its initial charge it doesn't need. Bluetooth range is
    EASILY over 100' to my cheap Moto BT headset. I answered two calls from
    the headset in the diner, listening to myself on the diner's landline
    phone and walking around. BIG phones seem to have better BT radios than
    tinyphones trying to save battery charge. I can leave the bag in the car
    and take AND MAKE calls to my voice activated phone numbers (up to 20 of
    the 500 it stores) from the headset.

    Did you have a V-series Moto cellphone? If so, you don't need any
    instructions. The M800 uses the same chipset as the trimode V60 series
    with the same interface and brightly lit blue monochrome display...just
    bigger (HUGE?). Simple, to the point, rock solid. The big candy bar
    part has BIG buttons for BIG hands (MANLY!) with a BIG display I can
    finally read the time on WITHOUT my glasses. Thanks, Moto.

    Sick of not hearing your cellphone ring? M800 sure solves that problem!
    Audio must be about 5 WATTS...Ringing on level 7 will impress a whole
    auditorium full of rock concert goers! It comes with about 20 ringtones,
    including many "tunes". It will be no problem hearing it ring 30' from a
    noisy truck without the BT headset. Unfortunately, there's no car horn
    output relay...but I can't have everything from the IMTS days...(c;
    Audio in such a big speaker talking to someone on Speakerphone is VERY
    impressive and VERY hifi for CDMA. The boss' booming voice will have
    plenty of bass and effect when he's pissed off. I took it for a ride in
    my noisy V-8 diesel Chevy stepvan, just sitting on top of the dash.
    There's no problem hearing what anyone you're talking to is saying and
    though, of course, they hear the truck noises, they have no trouble
    hearing you. The "mic" on the speakerphone is one of those big Motorola
    square, rugged microphones mounted next to the candy bar on the
    mainframe, out of harms way. This thing also comes with a visor-clip
    remote microphone on a long cord, really heavy duty stuff (MANLY?)that
    plugs into the control panel next to the standard USB camera jack where
    your computer plugs in. TWO speaker mics - standard equipment.

    The Case(S). There are two cases that quickclip together, phone on top,
    accessory case clips to the bottom for transport. The accessory case
    contains the BIG quick charger, the extra mic, the books, a STEEL battery
    case for a second camcorder battery, the standard 12V car charging cord
    which is also built like cop equipment (MANLY?). If you're going to
    leave it in the car, leave them clipped on top of each other and it makes
    a DANDY center arm rest with built-in speakerphone....just the right
    height. Sorry, no cup holder....

    Antenna and connector. The webpages I read said the antenna connector
    the big, foldup rubber duck is attached to was a "mini UHF". That's not
    what's on my Alltel M800. It's a heavily-built TNC, the screw-in BNC.
    This works out better for me because my truck antenna already has a TNC
    connector on it. She's ready to go! The rubber duck is a 3db, very
    heavy, with a hinge on top of its connector you fold down when you close
    the padded Velcro nylon cover. The connector points "up" from the normal
    phone position, and is recessed beside the privacy handset to prevent
    tearing up the connector or coax. Moto forgot to put a hole in the case
    to route the coax out of it through, a small matter...

    My Alltel rep could read the phonebook out of my V60i, but had no USB
    plug for this brand new phone to load it with. So, he was nice enough to
    put both the phonebook in database and txt files on a floppy so I could
    load the phone with Motorola Phone software from my computer on Bluetooth
    or through the USB cable. WinXP identified the phone when I plugged a
    standard USB camera cable into it, plug n play. Moto Phone Tools will
    load it tonight....as soon as I figure out how to read a 1.44MB floppy
    into computers that no longer have floppy drives...(c;

    Voicemail, SMS, etc., work exactly like a V60.

    AS soon as I decide I'm going to keep it (15 day return ok), I'm going to
    sew the carrying handle differently. Motorola carries the phone laying
    down and that makes it TOO WIDE for comfortable carrying. The nice,
    padded shoulder strap also carries it flat, not vertically. It's stupid.
    I'm going to sew the handle to the left side ends so it carries with
    battery down/plug panel up, like the old bagphones. The carrying handle
    only needs another set of metal rings to reposition where it connects to
    accomplish this. IT DOESN'T WEIGH 10 POUNDS...unless you carry all the
    accessories and accessory case with it attached to the bottom of it,
    which is absurd. With the battery, I'm guessing 4-5 lbs. We all need
    the exercise...(c;

    A required FCC warning sticker near the antenna warns you MUST be at
    LEAST 20cm (only 20cm??) from the antenna when you make a call.....too
    funny.

    Well, more reports after I use it some more. I sold another M800 to
    another old bagphone lover while registering mine. He has an AMPS
    bagphone he's had for many years on Alltel, as one of their oldest
    customers. He hunts in rural SC where AMPS is king! Tonight, he has
    retired his TX200 for his new M800. He's number 5. I'm number 4 sold.

    This will make a GREAT phone for motorhomes, yachts, vacation homes at
    the beach, but not for backpackers (the ones not masochistic, that is.)

    Larry
    --
    If she wants to use the phone...make her CARRY it!



  4. #4
    Larry
    Guest

    Re: Alltel and ATT get new MANLY phones!

    "Steven J. Sobol" <[email protected]> wrote in
    news:[email protected]:

    > Go ahead, fry your brains... no one here will notice
    >
    >


    Nothing on cellular radiates like the AM-FM broadcast stations I've worked
    on. An old friend of mine died who was the first Motorola 2-way radio
    dealer in SC after WW2. He was involved in radio since crystal sets
    listened to KDKA in the 20's. His brains weren't fried. He died because
    he was 92!

    Of course, if you want to talk your customers into letting you turn their
    transmitters from 3 watts and 10 miles to .15 watts and 2 miles.....just
    scare them into thinking their tiny phones are frying their brains and they
    can't WAIT for you to sell them a new phone with the little crap
    transmitter in it with a non-radiating "antenna".....right?

    Larry
    --
    "STAND BACK! SHIELD THE CHILDREN! I'm gonna call someone on The Beast
    M800!"
    POWER is our FRIEND!....(c;



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