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Cell Phones News Archive09-Sep-2008
AT&T puts Yahoo?s search engine on cell phones (Las Vegas Sun)
Mon, Sep 8, 2008 (5:21 p.m.) AT&T Inc. has become the first U.S. carrier to make Yahoo Inc.'s search engine the default on its Cell Phones, the companies said Monday.
Some Teachers Are Welcoming Cell Phones In Class (WITN 7 North Carolina)
Rather than wanting Cell Phones out of their classroom, some educators are now embracing them as platforms for learning.
AT&T puts Yahoo's search engine on cell phones (The State)
AT&T Inc. has become the first U.S. carrier to make Yahoo Inc.'s search engine the default on its cell phones, the companies said Monday. Yahoo's oneSearch replaces a search function from privately held Motricity Inc. on AT&T's MEdia Net cell phone portal, which is used on most of its Web-enabled phones, but not the iPhone. Yahoo will also be providing the advertising that appears along with ...
State prisons want to jam cell phones (The Greenville News)
COLUMBIA -- Cell phones, the everyday tool of Americans young and old, have become such a threat inside prisons that state officials have asked the Federal Communications Commission to relax a law prohibiting state and local governments from jamming phone signals.
AT&T puts Yahoo's search engine on cell phones (AP via Yahoo! News)
AT&T Inc. has become the first U.S. carrier to make Yahoo Inc.'s search engine the default on its cell phones, the companies said Monday.
San Francisco police probe cell phones to thwart criminals (People's Daily)
Police in San Francisco are battling crimes digitally with a new genre of cell phone forensic extraction devices, it was reported on Monday. These devices, made by companies including Cellebrite, Data Pilot and Oxygen Software, often can extract text messages, pictures or contact lists that the phone owner thinks they have erased, so long as new data hasn't been written over the old location in ...
Survey Says: No In-Flight Cell Phones (The Salt Lake Tribune)
Are you eager to chatter away on your cell phone at 35,000 feet in the air or listen to your seatmate do the same? Not so fast. More Americans oppose this idea than support it, according to a survey released last week by the U.S. Department of Transportation.
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