| 4phun 2007-12-29, 10:33 pm |
| On Dec 29, 8:46=A0pm, Todd Allcock <eleccon...@AmericaOnLine.com> wrote:
> At 29 Dec 2007 16:06:13 -0800 4phun wrote:
>
>
> Wow. =A0I'd better stop using it with T-Mobile USA on my WinMobile phone,
> then! =A0
>
> I still have my sign-up confirmation e-mail from Callwave.com, dated
> 4/20/07- over two months BI (Before iPhone) and I was, frankly, VERY late
> to the VV party. =A0(I held off signing up with Callwave for several month=
s
> because I used to use T-Mobile's "FaxMail" service to receive incoming
> faxes in my voicemail box.)
>
> I actually quasi-ditched Callwave's "official" VV in exchange for their
> Gizmo-Project partnered "Area 775" service that integrates mycellphone
> service with VoIP and VV. =A0Any unanswered cell call rolls to my VoIP cli=
ent
> (if online) or to VV if not. =A0This is particularly effective if I'm out =
of
> T-Mo coverage, but have WiFi access- the VoIP Client in my T-Mo MDA phone
> will ring just like I had cell service, and roll to my VV if I don't
> answer, all without my having to do anything (past the initial setup.)
You do know that iPhone VocieMail is actually stored in the 8 Gigs on
the iPhone. And you do know that you get a picture of the caller
attached to the VM notification on the iPhone, don't you?
It is not like other carriers like Verizon where you have to call your
Voice Mail service and listen to each VM in turn.
You can pick and choose who you listen to and when. Basically this is
possible because each AT&T iPhone comes with over 7000 MB more data
storage than almost other smartphone phone OTB.
|