Your phone rings and you are excited at first and then you look down and realize you don't recognize the number. It's not one of your friends or family members. You toy with whether you should answer that number or not.
Recently I have noticed that the battery on my Samsung Galaxy phone has been draining quicker than normal.
This can be pretty frustrating. You charge the battery all night and then within a couple of hours after it's unplugged the battery is drained of power.
Cell phones are a part of everyday life now. Calling your close ones and playing games used to be all you could want in a cell phone. Times are changing. Texting, looking for a new app, or just surfing the internet are now a major part of having a cell phone.
One time two years ago, some skeezebag stole our phone right out of our purse. For three months we were phone-less. So, we feel fairly well qualified to testify that this video, about what it's like to be surrounded by friends with smartphones when you don't have one, is pretty much spot on.
A couple of weeks ago the city of Amarillo had issue a ban on using cell phones while driving though out the city, and if caught the police would be giving you up to a $200 ticket for the new law.
Cell phones are a part of everyday life. Some people can't even go to the bathroom without their phone close by. But Amarillo is now one step closer to putting a ban on cell phone use while driving.
There are few things more frustrating than learning that some spammer has wasted a few megabytes of your data plan with advertisements for male enhancement pills or cash for gold schemes.
Cisco’s annual Global Mobile Data Traffic Forecast makes some interesting (some may say frightening) predictions, including the fact that the number of mobile-connected devices will exceed the world’s population sometime this year.