Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Phone Number Reverse Lookups Make Finding Others Easy

I'm not sure how I ever survived without caller ID.

It is a wonderful way to let you know what calls you have missed, and also lets you screen calls so you don't have to answer and take those calls that you don't want to. However, it is not the perfect solution, because number sometimes show up without a name attached to them, so you are still left in the dark about who is calling from these numbers. Usually, the numbers that show up the most without a name are cell phone numbers.

Recently I started learning about reverse lookup phone searches and phone number reverse lookups. In this case, the answer was simple -- anytime a caller ID number showed up without a name, I could put it into a specialized reverse lookup phone search engine and in most case find out the owner of the phone, as well as their address.

At first, I searched for some free phone number reverse lookup services, but quickly concluded that this was a waste of time. When I would find a free service, I would often find that when I put in a number that didn't have a name on it, I would get no results, or I would be requested to upgrade my membership to a paid service in order to get access to the database.

Since I still wanted to reform reverse lookup phone searches, I decided I would purchase a service. The first thing I did was perform searches for reviews on different phone number reverse lookup services out there, to try to find the best one. Most of the reviews I found pointed me to a very special service.

I immediately liked the service for a number of reasons. First of all, it is a "gateway" which allows you access to many different databases, which means you can search through hundreds of millions of different phone records, which include unlisted phone numbers and cell phone numbers.

Besides that, they only had a one-time fee. A lot of the other companies I looked at had monthly fees or search fees that you have to pay after performing a certain number of searches. These two things, combined with the refund policy, made it a no-brainer for me to try them out, and I can say I have been very satisfied with their service.

If you need to perform reverse lookup phone searches and phone number reverse lookups then I urge you to check out this service today.

If you want to have more information about it, check out the following review: A Reverse Lookup: Phone Number Identification Made Simple

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The iPod Is Almost Obselete

The iPod, in all its aliases such as nano, and the shuffle are practically antiques. Functionally, it's really just a personal stereo, which was originally patented by Srirekam Jayram Purushotam in 1974. It first reached true commercial success with the electronics giant Sony in 1979 when they sold their first Walkman model called the Soundabout. The iPod is still filling the same need, but using newer technology to do it better. Many of today's generation of clones marching around with white ear buds growing out of their ears, have probably never heard of a Walkman. Much in the same way the next batch will have no idea what the heck an iPod is.

There is technology just waiting in the wings which will replace the iPod as we know it. The iPod (and most mp3 players) markets, and differentiates its line of products by capacity. All the models really do the same thing, with the same set of controls. The biggest difference between them and the biggest factor determining price, is the capacity of the drives inside them. The second differentiating factor is of course the color. Kind of hard to charge more for blue or pink though. Anyway, there will come a time, when actually having a drive in your mp3 player or iPod will not be necessary. It really doesn't make sense. It makes the unit bigger, and drives the price up. Those little drives are far more expensive than comparable drives for bigger machines. Carrying your entire song collection on your person is kind of risky as well. What happens when Uncle Bob thinks its funny to pick you up and throw you into his new pool? Ooops, is that your 80Gb iPod with 20,000 of your favorite being sucked towards the pool drain? You've got that thing backed up right? Ha!

The answer is of course to store your entire song/picture collection on a server somewhere with proper data protection and backup facilities. Then all you need is a network ready receiver about half the size of a iPod nano with the ability to access your music off that protected server wherever you are. Capacity becomes meaningless. Running out of disk space on a current iPod / mp3 player means either deleting songs (are you nuts!) or buying a new player. Great for the manufacturer, but not so much for the consumer. The different pieces of technologies are there, it's just a question of someone putting it all together, and marketing it to the masses.

I think, maybe I'll just hold on to my old cassette Walkman, for a little longer. The next really great personal stereo for me is just around the next corner.

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about iPod Nanos procedures visit http://audiomp3players.info or simply read other articles about iPod Nanos and other topics by this author at foolishmumbles.com

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