"Your phone" windows app
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Gotcha. You made it sound like it was a yearly thing as too many people do. In your case, I'm surprised it's still happened often enough for you to say you "tend to" do it when the battery dies. With a sample of this size, you're one hell of a trend spotter. :-)
I had to carry a company "mobile" back in the pre-digital age, when I was on 24 hour call to the World's Most Annoying Customer. The batteries didn't last too long in those days, the battery tech was a lot cruder.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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that sounds really cool. i wonder if it will let you do SMS text messaging like google's little app will? i should probably check it out. i'm averse to phones but my hubby might get some use out of it. He's on the thing constantly.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Are your headphones connected to the PC or the phone?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
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Bluetooth connected to both in multi point setup...
www.robotecnik.com[^] - robots, CNC and PLC programming
Does that work?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
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Does that work?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
Yes, very well indeed... I have my laptop connected to my NAS through LAN, in my NAS there is all my music. Using MusicBee to play it. Headphones are connected to the laptop and to my cell phone using bluetooth. Whenever a phone call enters (even if I'm listening music from MusicBee/laptop) headphones switch to the phone and I can speak with the caller. Works same way when I start a call. I understand that, to make it work, headphones must have the multipoint bluetooth option. :cool:
www.robotecnik.com[^] - robots, CNC and PLC programming
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Yes, very well indeed... I have my laptop connected to my NAS through LAN, in my NAS there is all my music. Using MusicBee to play it. Headphones are connected to the laptop and to my cell phone using bluetooth. Whenever a phone call enters (even if I'm listening music from MusicBee/laptop) headphones switch to the phone and I can speak with the caller. Works same way when I start a call. I understand that, to make it work, headphones must have the multipoint bluetooth option. :cool:
www.robotecnik.com[^] - robots, CNC and PLC programming
Ah, yes that I have. Calls on one device and music on another. I thought you could make calls on two different devices. I suspect that your problem is that your laptop tries to pass also calls to your headphones.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
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It's a convenient way to get notifications at your PC and an easy way to get access to the latest pictures you've taken with your phone too... But the greatest feature of it is to be able to launch android calls from your PC. That way, any phone number on the web, or inside your outlook (or phone book software) can be called without picking the phone. SUPER! The only problem is that if you are using bluetooth headphones to get your hands free while performing the call, it simply doesn't work, and you can't redirect the call to your headphones in any way... This happens in income calls too... therefore, unless they solve this detail, a rocking feature is simply a bad thing. X|
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I have a Samsung and have been using SideSync for years. It displays the phone screen on your PC and allows you to access it via the mouse and keyboard. What MS came up with is second rate.
Yes, Sidesync worked very well, but I'm interested in the calls feature... that did not worked with my Galaxy S7... Being able to find a number in the internet and starting a call from your computer rocks. The problem is that while the call is running the phone uses the main speaker and microphone... so no hands free... I have not seen the Samsung Flow (I think that was it's name) software, so I can't say anything about it...
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It's a convenient way to get notifications at your PC and an easy way to get access to the latest pictures you've taken with your phone too... But the greatest feature of it is to be able to launch android calls from your PC. That way, any phone number on the web, or inside your outlook (or phone book software) can be called without picking the phone. SUPER! The only problem is that if you are using bluetooth headphones to get your hands free while performing the call, it simply doesn't work, and you can't redirect the call to your headphones in any way... This happens in income calls too... therefore, unless they solve this detail, a rocking feature is simply a bad thing. X|
This works pretty well until you have multiple bluetooth devices in play on your phone. Then you get disconnects.
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I had to carry a company "mobile" back in the pre-digital age, when I was on 24 hour call to the World's Most Annoying Customer. The batteries didn't last too long in those days, the battery tech was a lot cruder.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
OriginalGriff wrote:
I had to carry a company "mobile" back in the pre-digital age, when I was on 24 hour call to the World's Most Annoying Customer. The batteries didn't last too long in those days, the battery tech was a lot cruder.
Yeah, the battery mysteriously died just about the time the phone rang with MAC's number on the display... I had a similar position years ago, being responsible for all production errors at the app level (so not an admin or anything, but fixing bad queries etc). it wasn't fun, but I think it really made me a better developer--having to get in everyone's code for fixes made me learn a lot about what is decent code, and what's crap and should be avoided.
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OriginalGriff wrote:
I had to carry a company "mobile" back in the pre-digital age, when I was on 24 hour call to the World's Most Annoying Customer. The batteries didn't last too long in those days, the battery tech was a lot cruder.
Yeah, the battery mysteriously died just about the time the phone rang with MAC's number on the display... I had a similar position years ago, being responsible for all production errors at the app level (so not an admin or anything, but fixing bad queries etc). it wasn't fun, but I think it really made me a better developer--having to get in everyone's code for fixes made me learn a lot about what is decent code, and what's crap and should be avoided.
No Caller ID in those days! 7-segment LED display, no FarceBok - heck no Google even!
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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It's a convenient way to get notifications at your PC and an easy way to get access to the latest pictures you've taken with your phone too... But the greatest feature of it is to be able to launch android calls from your PC. That way, any phone number on the web, or inside your outlook (or phone book software) can be called without picking the phone. SUPER! The only problem is that if you are using bluetooth headphones to get your hands free while performing the call, it simply doesn't work, and you can't redirect the call to your headphones in any way... This happens in income calls too... therefore, unless they solve this detail, a rocking feature is simply a bad thing. X|
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honey the codewitch wrote:
t. i'm averse to phones
I have one because I need one: it's good for emergencies (both when I need help, and when others need help and I'm not home) and to do anything with my bank or credit cards, all of which want to send me a confirmation code in order to do anything useful. I have to admit, it would be handy to receive the SMS via the PC so I can copy'n'paste it into the web page ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
Google has you covered for SMS via the PC, or any device with a web browser I suppose.