The affable Dameon (that’s ‘day-mun’ for the nuance-challenged) can rightfully call himself Phoneboy (I sometimes wonder if he’s the secret sidekick to PhoneMan, the muscle-shirt-wearing Marvel comics character I’ve envisioned). The guy has 13 cell phones, and the video from the first one Dameon shows is really quite good. I sort of wonder if those of us who have experimented with video blogging are in some way proving the Kaplan principle. Now, if I could just figure out how to embed YouTube videos in WordPress posts. So far, it just ain’t workin’.
Tag Archives: used gear
Really cool USB phone DIY project
Bruce Stewart has the deets on how to build USB telephone for VoIPing that looks like one of those giant thick black plastic phones not seen since the early eighties. Check it out here.
Flight 93
I just saw the movie Flight 93 and I it was the most devestating thing I think I’ve ever watched in a film. I just can’t imagine what the people onboard that flight went through in reality and I hope so much that the man that orchestrated it is found and dealt with, soon. God Bless the victims and their familes.
Phones carry secrets
Courtesy of an AP writer, by way of my associate Andrew Colarik here in Cleveland. I wonder how long before the AP demands a royalty for my posting this, since I don’t have a link to their online version. Anyway, this is only a portion of the story by Ted Bridis. I’ll see if I can locate the online version:
Phones Spill Secrets of Previous Users
By TED BRIDIS
Associated Press Writer
Secondhand phones purchased over the Internet surrendered credit card numbers, banking passwords, business secrets and even evidence of adultery.
One married man’s girlfriend sent a text message to his cell phone: His wife was getting suspicious. Perhaps they should cool it for a few days.
“So,” she wrote, “I’ll talk to u next week.”
“You want a break from me? Then fine,” he wrote back.
Later, the married man bought a new phone. He sold his old one on eBay Inc. for $290.
The guys who bought it now know his secret.
The married man had followed the directions in his phone’s manual to erase all his information, including lurid exchanges with his lover. But it wasn’t enough.
Selling your old phone once you upgrade to a fancier model can be like handing over your diaries. All sorts of sensitive information pile up inside our cell phones, and deleting it may be more difficult than you think.
A popular practice among sellers, resetting the phone, often means sensitive information appears to have been erased. But it can be resurrected using specialized yet inexpensive software found on the Internet.
A company, Trust Digital of McLean, Va., bought 10 phones on eBay this summer to test phone-security tools it sells for businesses. The phones all were fairly sophisticated models capable of working with corporate e-mail systems.
Curious software experts at Trust Digital resurrected information on nearly all the used phones, including the racy exchanges between guarded lovers.
The other phones contained:
-One company’s plans to win a multimillion-dollar federal transportation contract.
-E-mails about another firm’s $50,000 payment for a software license.
-Bank accounts and passwords.
-Details of prescriptions and receipts for one worker’s utility payments.
The recovered information was equal to 27,000 pages – a stack of printouts 8 feet high.
“We found just a mountain of personal and corporate data,” said Nick Magliato, Trust Digital’s chief executive.
Many of the phones were owned personally by the sellers but crammed with sensitive corporate information, underscoring the blurring of work and home. “They don’t come with a warning label that says, ‘Be careful.’ The data on these phones is very important,” Magliato said.
One phone surrendered the secrets of a chief executive at a small technology company in Silicon Valley. It included details of a pending deal with Adobe Systems Inc. and e-mail proposals from a potential Japanese partner:
“If we want to be exclusive distributor in Japan, what kind of business terms you want?” asked the executive in Japan.
Advice for buying gear on eBay
I was just reading a forum post about a guy who bought a 16-channel mixer off of eBay for a hundred bucks and then got zinged for an additional two hundred for the shipping. Now I know ground shipping can be expensive, especially for heavy gear (though I can’t imagine how heavy a 16-channel mixer could be, nowadays). The lesson to be learned, I guess, is to really check out eBay listings before you bid. Here’s some advice from somebody who has bought and sold quite a bit on eBay:
1. If there’s time, email the seller and ask for additional, high-res photos. These may reveal imperfections that aren’t visible on the eBay site, and you might get to see other angles of the gear.
2. Don’t buy from people who have anything less than a 98% positive feedback rating. Just trust me on this one.
3. Find out whether or not the gear comes in its original packaging or casing. This may seem inconsequential, but if the seller still has original packaging material, that’s a fair indicator of how well taken care of the gear is.
4. If buying something that can be obtained new or through another channel than eBay, check the pricing of the gear elsewhere. Just because it’s on eBay doesn’t mean it’s a good deal.
5. Check the shipping policy three or four times before you bid. The number one way to screw buyers on eBay is through shipping fees.
What would you add to this list?