Soldato
- Joined
- 29 Jul 2013
- Posts
- 8,605
exactly!maybe people turned their phones on as the **** hit the fan? and some of them, somehow survived the impact to still be able to receive calls?
exactly!maybe people turned their phones on as the **** hit the fan? and some of them, somehow survived the impact to still be able to receive calls?
maybe people turned their phones on as the **** hit the fan? and some of them, somehow survived the impact to still be able to receive calls?
All this talk of phones is odd too. Surely the phones would have been off for take off, which means that they have since been turned on?
I always do ^_^In theory, but in practice rarely do people turn their phones off during take-off/landing.
In theory, but in practice rarely do people turn their phones off during take-off/landing.
Or you know the more sensible, they aren't actually ringing and its just the network getting confused. if you search fake phone rung then you'll find loads if posts discussing it, some with some details about how phone networks ring.
Its just most people don't think about such things as usually if it rings. then you just think they haven't picked up.
I would much rather it had been landed somewhere, at least then there would be a chance of survival for the passengers.
Because its by far the fastest and safest way to travel even with these minor inconveniences.
It's actually faster and safer to travel to places like France by train.
I find it hard to believe nobody on board had an iphone
find my iphone anyone?
I thought phones needed to be answered and the call held for a certain length of time for the position to be triangulated. At least that's the way it is in movies.
roaming 3g or even edge? no idea if that works when abroad....think it does though
Google it, heres one example
http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20070621213852AA5COGt
And why would you have ever heard of it. Its not something which would normally come up as you would just assume they didn't answer and then it diverts you to voicemail anyway.
Yes that post might be utter rubbish, yet is still far more likely that the other scenarios people have said.
Its like all the people who said it was impossible for the people on 9/11 flights to make s phone call, too fast, to high etc. Yet since then several people have tried it and it works fine although unreliable.
I've never had that happen to any phone I've had or others have had. If I turn my phone off or go out of service and try to call it it goes straight to voicemail (on EE).
In reality they ask the service provider what cell tower the phone was connected to...
Surely a plane would be fitted with a more sophisticated tracking system than an iPhone?
How would you know especially if it only happens very occasionally.
maybe people turned their phones on as the **** hit the fan? and some of them, somehow survived the impact to still be able to receive calls?
Even better i've heard if you jump just before impact you can walk away unscathed.