He's running operations from the Ivory Coast, where he switches out cellphones and burners to make tracing nearly impossible. |
|
The robbers made off with a video machine, two cellphones, a DVD player and several compact discs. |
|
Yummy mummies are still yabbering away on cellphones while jogging with luxury prams. |
|
To be viable, cellphones and future wireless Internet access devices will need to be mass-produced. |
|
The increasing use of cellphones in B.C. has exacerbated the problem, Daykin said, noting he has accidentally pocket-dialed people before. |
|
Digital cellphones are similar to radar, using pulses carried by microwaves. |
|
These are the sort of cellphones that are wasted on techno illiterates like me. |
|
They were obviously in no position to answer their cellphones which kept ringing with distracting regularity. |
|
Uncertainty over radiation from cellphones has been compounded by the lack of a standard test. |
|
They range from toy cellphones, chocolates, biscuits and drawing pens to colourful clothes. |
|
Many people, including the educated, are unmindful of or oblivious to the disturbance they cause to others while speaking over their cellphones. |
|
Of course, high-value and high-technology innovation not only means computers and cellphones. |
|
All cellphones made in the US now have to include some form of locator technology so that they can be tracked by emergency services. |
|
In February came claims that an unpublished study had found that cellphones cause memory loss. |
|
The problem may be particularly serious in Britain, but we should remember that thieves steal cellphones everywhere. |
|
He said his son voluntarily took out his cellphone from his bag after pupils with cellphones were asked to hand them over. |
|
The United States Telecom Association has filed a suit to prevent people taking their landline numbers to cellphones. |
|
The best parts of the documentary were when the re-enactors, in full dress, were talking on cellphones or riding around in Saabs. |
|
Some of these systems are still being installed in aircraft, so the CAA cannot risk lifting the ban on the use of cellphones in flight. |
|
With new jamming technology, cellphones can be completely blocked in a bid to keep the outside world at bay. |
|
|
Nothing is more important on a golf course than golf and there is no place for cellphones! |
|
All cellphones must adapt to harness this technology or they will be left in the dust. |
|
Bluetooth allows gadgets such as palmtops, printers and cellphones to communicate over the air at 1 megabit per second. |
|
Soon we will start to see devices arriving that combine palmtop computers with cellphones with Internet devices with GPS systems. |
|
Once only a few precious Yuppies had cellphones, now every burglar has at least one mobile. |
|
They are completely lost, with no water, no maps and certainly no cellphones or GPS handsets. |
|
We are thinking of self-imposed measures for use of cellphones, but they are unwanted on school and college campuses. |
|
Standard batteries can power digital cellphones for several hours of transmission or days of standby operation. |
|
All matriculants were given cellphones with connectivity for a period of two years. |
|
The cartel men kept the phone numbers of ICE agents on their prepaid cellphones. |
|
Prior to our consumption, the lights in the lodge were turned off and we were asked to turn off any cellphones. |
|
Motorola developed the first cellphone system more than 20 years ago, along with the exchanges that connect standard cellphones to the public telephone network. |
|
Expect 40-somethings with at least two cellphones but a pair of Converses to emphasize their youngness-of-heart. |
|
Justice Andrias said that when his children were in school, they did not have cellphones, and he was not able to communicate with them all day. |
|
But the iPhone may be a poor example: people were already comfortable buying cellphones. |
|
He passed purses and cellphones still lying on tables, next to plates of uneaten food. |
|
Other human studies that seemed to exonerate cellphones are also problematic. |
|
As an example, they often use pay-as-you-go cellphones as a means of avoiding police wiretaps, changing them frequently. |
|
Thanks to this time span, it is also possible to implement remote-controlled functions from GSM cellphones. |
|
A small but increasing proportion of Canadian households are serviced by cellphones only and are therefore excluded from landline surveys. |
|
|
New studies suggest that prenatal exposure to anti-depressants, microwaves and cellphones may lead to ADHD and autism. |
|
The biggest thing is no cellphones, which is sort of great because everything is so gadgety these days. |
|
A small box holds cellphones that have been charged at the power strip behind her chair. |
|
Unlike the original forty-niners, though, some of today's caravans involve minivans, wetsuits and cellphones. |
|
She wants the pedestrians who are jaywalking or focused on their cellphones and MP3 players to pay more attention as well. |
|
In the courtroom, I make sure that the rules of the court are respected, like the rule prohibiting cameras, recorders, pagers, and cellphones. |
|
Many modern digital cellphones and pagers allow users to disable audible ringing, so they can quietly pick up calls in public places or have the phone take messages. |
|
Bell customers are now able to use their cellphones in all indoor spaces, including aboard trains inside stations and tunnels. |
|
Due to its very low power levels, WLAN data communication is less critical than the radiation from cellphones. |
|
Pilot customers in Strasbourg, France, are now using their cellphones to make payments in local cinemas, restaurants and supermarkets. |
|
Like any technology, from pencils to cellphones, anonymity can be used for both good and bad. |
|
Not suitable for 1800 MHz, but most cellphones switch back to 900 MHz if a 1800 MHz net is unavailable. |
|
Most, but not all, young people participating in this study have at least occasional access to cellphones. |
|
We now know that both of the so-called printer bombs employed circuit boards from cellphones to activate the detonators. |
|
They unplugged their cellphones from overloaded outlets so a girl with cerebral palsy could recharge her wheelchair. |
|
What's more, she provides a look at New Delhi as the city westernizes into a circus of cellphones, saris, golf foursomes, hennaed hands and shiny cars. |
|
Compounding the conundrum further is the fact that many cellphones allow direct access to information in remote cloud storage. |
|
One doctor told them to keep their cellphones off their bodies and use them only to text or with a corded headset for two months. |
|
Many held up camcorders or cellphones with cameras to capture the scene. |
|
So why should payphone cards and prepay cellphones be any different? |
|
|
Today's Wall Street Journal had a story on syncing PCs and cellphones. |
|
Please turn your cellphones off or put them in vibration mode. |
|
Polycarbonate electroluminescent films can provide light in homes, cars, cellphones, and even inside ladies' handbags. |
|
Will cellphones interfere with the radio signals? |
|
The bloggers' cellphones and ids were taken by Egyptian police. |
|
However, some specialists believe that the death knell has more or less sounded for these devices, due to the proliferation of GPS systems built into cellphones, laptop computers and other mobile devices. |
|
The report will assist public opinion researchers in the government and the marketing research industry across Canada to make strategic choices about Internet, landline telephones and cellphones as data collection tools. |
|
An obligation on those selling pre-paid cellphones or phone cards to collect people's sensitive information such as driver's license and credit card numbers before making the sale would be a gross invasion of privacy. |
|
Out there are legions of women who don't own computers or want one.... What they do is labrish endlessly on their cellphones and vote. |
|
Cellphone users generally had fixed-line telephones too, often of poor quality, but cellphones were sometimes used as public payphones in local shops. |
|
Make sure electronic devices such as cellphones, laptop computers and portable or electronic games are charged and ready to turn on for inspection when going through airport security. |
|
These antennas are used to extend the range of cellphones and data cards. |
|
Metallized films, on the other hand, tend to be more reflective and can interfere with radio frequency signals used by cellphones, tire pressure monitors and radio antennas embedded in the window glass. |
|
So far, the team has reported publicly on the accidental death of a child caused by a baby walker, on abandoned babies and the safe haven law, and on the potential problem with using cellphones to make 911 calls. |
|
Bluetooth technology enables wireless interconnection of all types of devices, from GSM cellphones to TV sets, or even computer keyboards and mouses. |
|
Industry Canada's basic role is to ensure that Safety Code 6 levels are respected with regard to, firstly, portable radio communication devices such as cellphones, and secondly, antenna towers and their surroundings. |
|
Five years ago, cellphones were still a middle-class accouterment. |
|
Shots of Armadale, a Scottish vodka that Roc-A-Fella recently acquired, were served around a conference table to at least seven associates, who worked and chattered on cellphones amid the thumping bass of a mixed tape. |
|
The day's events attended by over a thousand people began with a peace march, followed by talks on violence and health, and the projection of videos filmed on cellphones at the local telecentre. |
|
In an age when cellphones have largely eliminated the need for a timepiece, the monster wristwatch serves another purpose, as a holdout of permissibly conspicuous consumption. |
|
|
While some use cellphones or use other wireless technology, landlines support their health and safety. |
|
This poses a problem for polling companies because the 1991 Telephone Consumer Protection Act means that they can't just autodial those cellphones. |
|
Cloned cellphones, spoofed websites and the theft of or unauthorized access to database information are just some of the methods criminal organizations are currently using. |
|
Many other services can be provided to urban residents such as voice telephony by cellphones, messaging by paging or cellphone, local wireless telephone network and mobile radio for fleets of vehicles. |
|
We did what we usually do — my mom and I grabbed our cellphones, radio, flashlight and two dogs, and headed to the crawlspace while my dad checked the radar and looked outside. |
|
No keys, cellphones, suntan lotion, deck chairs or newspapers. |
|
Previous Internet cellphones, by contrast, made smoke signals look speedy. |
|
Orders for Finland's cellphones and Singapore's circuit boards plummeted. |
|
Telefonica's Emocion or T-Mobile's T-Zones are specially adapted for viewing on cellphones. |
|
The lawsuit alleges that Port Authority investigators abused their authority by coercing the officers under investigation to turn over their personal cellphones so that they could be searched. |
|
While ancient temples bear with the non-stop ringing of the most advanced cellphones, street food is being prepared with the same old, close-to perfect movements. |
|
Over and over again, in interview after interview, Port Authority investigators isolated probationary officers and demanded to review their cellphones. |
|
With cellphone radiation, he found that when he looked at individuals who used cellphones, there was an increase in something called ipsilateral tumours, which are tumours on the same side of head that you use the cellphone. |
|
Third-world villagers without electricity have cellphones. |
|
Carew, aged 25, says that, since the war ended, the main difference he sees is more cars and cellphones for the wealthy. Another worry is the army. |
|
In a sweeping June decision, the US's highest court unanimously ruled that police must obtain a warrant to search the contents of cellphones seized from people they have arrested. |
|
Short text messages, which are called tweets, are spread virally using computers or cellphones. |
|
New Democrats have consistently been calling for consumer protection, whether it is gas pumps, whether it is product safety, whether it is credit cards or cellphones. |
|
Please put your cellphones on vibrate for the duration of the meeting. |
|
All they had for equipment were binoculars, cellphones, and lawn chairs. |
|