@kdfrawg surely as strong as mine ?
Because the TSA wants to inconvenience us more in the name of security theater: https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2017/07/travelers-electronics-at-us-airports-to-get-enhanced-screening-tsa-says/
@matigo she likes YouTube. A lot. And, yes, doesn't seem to like WiFi as much as she should.
Personally, I don't care that much as it's a problem that only impacts her and she can solve it herself if she so desires.
// @larand
Running an alpha version of one our products on my system, which I needed R&D's help to install. They told me I was now on the hook to provide feedback. I told them: I break things, that's my job.
Sure enough, I didn't disappoint. Took me less than 24 hours to report something :)
@larand My regular line is on AT&T, the rest of my family is using Cricket. That said, by the time you add four lines to an account, the fifth one is free, assuming you stick with the $40/mo plan. I've been using that to acquire (and test) cheap Android phones for work.
Cricket is basically AT&T throttled to 8mb/s on LTE. Family seems to be reasonably happy with it, except my daughter who frequently goes over the 4GB monthly allotment and gets slowed to 128k/s :P
// @matigo
@matigo There are actually three SIM card sizes:
- Standard SIM (used by the 3GS and all my old Nokia phones)
- Micro SIM (The iPhone 4/4s had this, as did my Nokia Lumia 520)
- Nano SIM (Most GSM phones use this now)
I actually meant the Micro SIM (not mini SIM).
@matigo the only odd thing about it: it uses a mini SIM instead of a micro SIM. Had to find an adapter for it (fortunately have plenty of those).
@kdfrawg however, it might be the winner of my informal "cheap Android" shootout.
@kdfrawg it's a phone. It runs Android somewhat smoothly. It takes half way decent pictures.