Quantcast
Results tagged “phones”
Gmail Accounts and Burners for D.C.

Gmail Accounts and Burners for D.C.

No matter how much you love that new Gmail interface or the gas station-bought disposable cell phone, they have no place in Mayor Vince Gray's administration. Or so he claims. more ›

Verizon Weather Hotline Finally Dies

Verizon Weather Hotline Finally Dies

The D.C. time and weather hotline -- which, to our surprise, a whole bunch of city residents still cared deeply about despite the advent of the Internet -- has finally bit the dust. more ›

Our Long National (BlackBerry) Nightmare Is Over

Our Long National (BlackBerry) Nightmare Is Over

So says the Beeb, which notes that Washingtonians should now have "fully restored" service on however many devices they haven't been able to obsessively tap on of late. more ›

International BlackBerry Service Interruption Hits D.C.

International BlackBerry Service Interruption Hits D.C.

An international interruption in BlackBerry services is now affecting North America, which means that a majority of people inside offices on Capitol Hill and along K Street are probably running around wondering if they should crack each other's heads open and feast on the goo inside. more ›

Verizon Weather Hotline Gets Stay of Execution <em>Updated</em>

Verizon Weather Hotline Gets Stay of Execution Updated

UPDATE: Looks like we might have helped to blow the service's cover -- we tried calling the service again later this morning and were greeted by a message stating that Verizon would no longer be maintaining the service. Those of you who still use the service will have to keep your fingers crossed that another organization picks up the contract to keep the hotline alive. more ›

Federal Emergency Alerts Coming To D.C. Phones

Federal Emergency Alerts Coming To D.C. Phones

Federal officials announced today that many smartphone users in Washington will receive alerts regarding "national or regional emergencies" -- similar to those familiar Emergency Broadcast System television announcements -- on their cell phones beginning by the end of the year. According to the New York Times, the service, which will also be installed in New York, will be available to those who have a special chip inside their phones and will pass along messages like "alerts issued by the president, information about public safety threats and Amber Alerts for missing children." more ›

Verizon Killing Weather, Time Service You Didn't Know Still Existed

Verizon Killing Weather, Time Service You Didn't Know Still Existed

I remember once as a kid calling the time service over and over, on a bored rainy day. It seemed so funny to me that you could call a number and get the time of day, as if you couldn't just look at a clock. Well, it turns out you won't be able to do that, nor get the weather via hotline, anymore. more ›

Yvette Alexander's Phone Bills: Piling Up?

Yvette Alexander's Phone Bills: Piling Up?

The cavalcade of various financial issues plaguing D.C. Councilmembers continues unabated: the Washington Times reports that the phones at Ward 7 Councilmember Yvette Alexander's constituent services office on 2524 Pennsylvania Avenue SE were recently turned off because the office ran up $5,388.68 in unpaid phone bills to Verizon. more ›

Are Landlines Officially Antiques?

Are Landlines Officially Antiques?

Only a handful of people I know still have landlines at home. It's especially marked among people under 30, those of us who moved to the city and into a group house soon after college at a time when cell phones were basically mandatory. Maybe we've moved into nicer places since then, but who needs a landline? It's just an extra expense that seems increasingly redundant. more ›

1

send a tip

tips@dcist.com
Follow dcist on Twitter