Skip to Content

AOL Tech

landline posts

Green Tech

'Vampire' LED Lamp Sucks Power From Phone Cord

LED Lamp Gets Free Power from Phone Cord
While this lamp is hot pink and looks like a computer mouse with some kind of mutant growth sticking out of its back, it will cost you literally nothing to run.

This monstrosity has eight LEDs that provide light to read by, and rather than jacking up your electricity bill, it runs on power siphoned from your local telco. You see, rather than plugging into a standard power outlet, this lamp has an RJ11 plug (commonly known as a phone jack) on the end that plugs into that weird looking box in the corner that you haven't touched since cell phone coverage became pretty much ubiquitous. The reading light works because land line phone cords carry a small amount of electricity which is required to power wired handsets (remember those?). Interestingly, that power flows whether or not you have active phone service and, best of all, won't go down in the event of a blackout.

Read more →

Cell Phones

1 in 5 Americans Going Cell Phone Only



Bad news for traditional phone companies: Apparently, the recession has only accelerated the move away from landline phones. Now, one in every five American homes has ditched their landline all together, and cellular-only households outnumber those relying exclusively on traditional phones.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of cell phone only homes jumped 3-percent in the last half of 2008 -- a record pace. To illustrate the point, it has been reported that, since March of 2008, Verizon's landline business shrunk by 5 million customers, while its cell phone business grew by 20 million customers.

Read more →

Cell Phones

Americans Spending More on Cell Phones than Landlines

Americans Spend More on Cell Phones than Landlines
The writing is on the wall for landline based phones. We've been heralding their demise since Switched launched.

Every time a new study is released on the number of cell phones vs. landlines in the U.S., the number of people who prefer or rely solely on cell phones creeps up and the number of landlines slips slowly, pushing the idea of a "home phone" towards the dustbin of history.

According to the latest statistics out of the Department of Labor, average annual household spending on cell phones has surpassed that of landlines for the first time. Annual spending "per consumer unit" for cell phones increased from $210 in 2001 to $608 in 2007. In the same period, spending on landline phones decreased from $686 to $482.

Read more →

Cell Phones

The Cell Phone Comes to Cuba


While those of us in the United States might consider an iPhone or BlackBerry to be the ultimate mobile status symbol, Cubans are just now lusting after the most basic of cell phones, we learned from the Washington Post via Textually.org.

Cuba's new president, Raul Castro, has introduced cell phones to the Cuban marketplace -- along with other formerly contraband devices like DVD players, microwaves and computers -- and, from all appearances, the average Cuban is anxious to acquire one.

Once he or she can save up for it, that is.

At present, the Cuban government offers a simple Nokia 1112 phone and charger for the equivalent of $58, a small fortune for the average Cuban who, according to the BBC, earns $20 a month.

And billing plans are just as costly. To actually use the phone, a consumer must pay a $65 registration fee and a rate of 65 cents per minute. Due to the latter charge, many essentially use their phones as beepers. In a typical situation, an individual would call a friend's cell phone from a land line. The friend, seeing the number pop up on the cell phone, would then hustle to the nearest land line to return the call.

Some, enticed by the Cuban government's 17 cent per text message rate, prefer to go that route.

As far as overseas calls go, folks fearing communist influence riding the airwaves into the U.S. have nothing to worry about; a one minute call to the States runs a Cuban cell phone user $2.70. [From: Washington Post via Textually.org]

Cell Phones

Businesses and Colleges Cutting Landlines

Businesses and Colleges Cutting Landlines
The writing has been on the wall for a while for landlines. We've reported more than once on how more people are going cell phone only (especially those under 30). Now, however, it's not just households, but businesses and colleges that are starting to ditch traditional wired phones and signaling danger for any company that exclusively operates landline phone services.

The City Administrator's office in Washington D.C. and semi-conductor manufacturer KLA-Tencor, have taken the first steps towards cutting the cord. They've both launched pilot programs in order to save money where small numbers of employees (between 30 and 40) have been issued cell phones and given up their dedicated desk lines.

St. Mary's College in Notre Dame, IN; Marquette University in Milwaukee, WI; Roanoke College in Salem, VA; and Elon University in Elon, NC have taken more strident steps. The colleges have removed landlines from dorms over the past two years and educators have embraced their mobiles as a better way of keeping in touch with students on the go.

It's only a matter of time before we think of wired phones the same way we do of vinyl records and VHS tapes: quaint relics of a simpler time. [From: USA Today]

Cell Phones

Increasingly, US Households Going Cell Phone Only

More and More Americans Turning Cell Phone OnlyEarlier this year we reported that 16-percent of households have cut the tether; relying exclusively on cell phone service and canceling landline service altogether. We have a follow-up survey now, and perhaps unsurprisingly, that number continued to grow, now up to 17.5 percent.

One year ago that figure was 13.6 percent, showing a progressive rate of change among people eager to be rid of their corded phones -- and the bevy of fees and surcharges that come along with them. However, despite an impressive 30,000 households taking place in this poll, there's one important caveat that casts a bit of doubt over its accuracy: in the past, only households with landlines have been called. So, exactly how the pollsters can accurately say how many people had moved exclusively to wireless is anyone's guess. But, fear not, as the pollsters pledge to include more wireless-only households in future revisions. Hope you have plenty of minutes! [From: Reuters]

Do you still have a traditional landline phone?





Cell Phones

AT&T Cutting 12,000 Jobs Due to "Economic Pressures"


AT&T may have about the best selection of choice handsets (smart or otherwise) available in the States right now, and continued iPhone exclusivity has definitely brought a windfall of new subscribers to its wireless division, but Ma Bell wasn't built on cell towers alone. There's still an extensive landline division to support, and it seems the company is leveraging the current economic doldrums to make it a little less so, joining the layoff crowd for the second time this year by shedding a further 12,000 workers (about 4 percent of its workforce), most said to be coming from passé, non-wireless sectors. So, happy holidays, folks -- hope those severance packages get you through the winter.

[Via CellPhonesMarket.com; thanks, SK]

Cell Phones

TrueCall Fights Telemarketers and Unknown Callers

Telemarketers-turned-inventors from the United Kingdom have started shipping TrueCall (£99.99), a device that acts as an automated secretary on your land line, either forwarding trusted numbers to your phone or answering untrusted numbers with an automated message and shooing them away. When an unrecognized number dials in, TrueCall asks them who they are and then rings you asking whether or not you want to take it. Sure, it's not the most fun way to automatically ditch unscrupulous callers, but we'd like to listen in on the conversation when a robocall reaches this baby -- it'd be like one wall talking to another wall.

[Via Slashdot]

Cell Phones, Computers, BlackBerry, MySpace, YouTube

Teens Still Prefer Landline Phones, Says Study

Teens On Phone
The Pew Internet and American Life Project has been mighty busy as of late. Hot on the heels of its study that revealed that people like to Google themselves, but like to Google others even more is a fresh batch of stats about how teenagers communicate.

The survey of 12 to 17 year old boys and girls turned up some shocking information -- teens still prefer a good old-fashioned landline phone to other means of communication. 39 percent of teens said they talked to friends everyday via a landline phone. That's actually slightly more than the 35 percent who said they talked to friends on their cell phones everyday, but is almost twice the number who relied on social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace and good chunk more than those who used text messaging daily.

Not surprising is the lowly 14 percent who said they used e-mail daily. Past studies have already shown that young people are not fans of the oldest form of electronic communication.

One thing is for sure - they won't be using public pay phones for long, as AT&T plans to phase those out.

From USA Today



Related links:

Cell Phones

Landlines to Follow the Dinosaurs

Landlines to Follow Dinosaurs
Like Tom Cruise's career, telephone landlines are on a path to extinction. That's according to a recent study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which, apparently, has grown bored of studying its usual fodder of killer viruses, avian flu and other flesh eating bugs.

The study reports that more than 25 percent of folks under 30 have ditched traditional landline phones in favor of an all-mobile diet. In addition, people in lower-income households are dropping landlines in record numbers, deciding that their money is better spent on cell phones.

According to the study, landline abandonment not only affects the lifespans of the Bells. It also affects 911 emergency service providers and polling organizations which no longer have access to a huge chunk of the population.

Of course, the real losers are telemarketers who are surely shaking in their boots.

Related Links:

From Slashdot

Switched Video

Follow Switched on Twitter

Deals of the Day

Latest Reviews from CNET.com

CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

Top Product Reviews

  • Home Audio Reviews

    9.0 out of 10

    Definitive Technology BPX
    Works great with Dolby Pro Logic and Dolby Digital. Full Review

    9.0 out of 10

    Denon AVR-4306 (black)
    Incredibly well-featured 7.1-channel receiver; excellent sound quality; three HDMI inputs; converts analog video to HDMI output; upconverts analog video to 720p/1080i HD resolution; iPod and USB MP3 player connectivity; Internet radio and MP3/WMA streaming audio via built-in Ethernet port; XM Satellite Radio compatible; touch-screen remote; multizone, multisource operation; browser-based control via home network; accurate autocalibration routine. Full Review

    8.8 out of 10

    KEF KHT3005 (black)
    The KEF KHT-3005 is one compact, beautifully designed speaker package with solid aluminum satellites that feature unique driver technology to produce incredible clarity. Meanwhile, the equally astounding dual 10-inch, 250-watt powered subwoofer delivers ultradeep bass. Full Review

  • Cell Phone Reviews

    8.7 out of 10

    SignalBoost Mobile Professional Amplifier Kit
    The Mobile Professional Amplifier delivers a powerful signal boost to your cell phone. Also, it offers a compact design and easy setup. Full Review

    8.6 out of 10

    Wi-Ex zBoost YX510-PCS-CEL cell phone signal extender
    The Wi-Ex zBoost YX510-PCS-CEL significantly boosts your cell phone reception and is easy to operate. Also, it uses a wireless connection to your phone. Full Review

    8.3 out of 10

    LG VX6000 (Verizon Wireless)
    Compact and stylish; impressive battery life; solid audio quality; sharp color screen; built-in camera; USB ready; affordable. Full Review

  • Digital Camera Reviews

    9.3 out of 10

    Canon EOS 1D Mark III
    Extremely fast, 10-megapixel continuous shooting; very low noise; highly customizable; well-designed body with weather sealing; 3-inch LCD; abundant optional accessories. Full Review

    9.3 out of 10

    Nikon D3 (body only)
    Full-frame sensor; well designed, pro-level weather-sealed body; very low noise, even at extremely high ISOs; fast. Full Review

    9.0 out of 10

    Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III
    Very low noise, high quality images; 21.1 megapixels; live view shooting; pro-level build-quality and performance. Full Review

  • Desktop Reviews

    8.9 out of 10

    Velocity Micro Edge Z30 (Intel Core i7)
    Best value among midrange gaming PCs; Velocity Micro's consistently high build quality; compact case makes few sacrifices; second graphics card slot previously uncommon at this price. Full Review

    8.5 out of 10

    Apple iMac (24-inch, 2.8GHz)
    A minor specification update results in some significant performance gains; graphics upgrade an option on this 24-inch model; sleek, polished design didn't receive an update, but we won't start clamoring for a new design until the current one is at least 12 months old. Full Review

    8.4 out of 10

    Velocity Raptor Signature Edition Gaming PC
    One of the fastest PCs we've tested; a PCI Express RAID card helps media encoding performance; typically immaculate Velocity Micro assembly; strong, three-year warranty. Full Review

Featured Galleries

Nissan Land Glider
Vintage Keyboards
Retro Computer Logos
Vintage Computer Festival
Motorola CLIQ
iPod touch
iTunes 9
Video iPod Nano
The Beatles: Rock Band

 

Switched Desktop

Get the New Switched Desktop

Latest tech news, Switched mail, and more.

AOL Tech Network

Resources

Autoblog

Daily Finance

Download Squad

Engadget

Joystiq

Urlesque

Fanhouse Main

WalletPop

Gadling