Installing the phone system at the original World Trade Center
Is there an equivalent video like this by AT&T (or Verizon?) of the same system being installed in the Freedom tower?
Never let your friends text for you
Somehow I missed this Wong Fu short a few weeks ago. It talks about the dangers of letting friends do stuff for you on the phone. Always a miscommuncation to be had.
This American life: One Last Thing Before I Go
This was one of the saddest episodes of This American Life that I can remember listening to. Act One in particular is what struck me most as fascinating. It's about a phone booth in rural Japan that attracts many people to it because it acts as a sort of comforting communication device to the dead. The phone isn't connected to anything at all, yet it offers relief to those who may be seeking answers from the afterlife (especially those who have lost loved ones in the 2011 tsunami).
Google's phone will launch on October 4th
I own an iPhone, but for what it's worth, my iPhone is just a device that lets me use my Google services from which my life really runs on. So when Google says they are going to launch their own phone, my ears perk up because it might actually make me switch. It's happened before and it wasn't perfect, but I might be enticed yet again very soon.
The fight against telecoms price gouging prisoners
There's a really great longform article written by Colin Lecher over at The Verge that talks about the way telecoms have screwed prisoners with extravagant chargers for calls made to the outside world.
As you scroll down the article, there's a timer that appears on the lefthand side of the page that acts very much like a timer these telephone companies would use to calculate how much a phone call from inside the prison costs. Most often than not, these included flat rates just to start the call, then pretty expensive per-minute rates thereafter. It's a way to price-gouge those that the majority of society tends to lock away and forget.
But the article goes quite in depth into how one grandmother of a prisoner fought the system and temporarily won, causing telephone contractors in bed with prisons to lower their rates to something at least comparable to the outside world. Unfortunately, the prison system fought back and essentially forced the FCC to backpedal on their decision to cap per-minute rates at 20 cents. Now, some states have gone back to their old ways, charging prisoners exuberant fees just to talk to family and friends. For now, it's legal, but hopefully this changes permanently soon.