Showing posts with label emergency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emergency. Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2022

What is Zello app all about? PTT on iPhone an android phone + much more.

10th November, 2022
http://shorturl.at/sxzAZ
Tweet http://shorturl.at/gkKU0

What is Zello app all about?
Zello is the #1 digital two way radio app with over 150 million users in over 200 countries. Frontline workers, teams, and communities stay connected, safe, and productive. Zello turns your phone into a walkie talkie that works anywhere in the world as long as you are connected to the internet!

The official site is https://zello.com/

iOS Download:  https://zello.com/downloads/
 
Android Download: https://zello.com/downloads/android/

What is the difference between free Zello and Zello for Business?
Zello for Business requires a subscription, and offers exclusive enterprise-grade features to optimize team communication, including a secure private network, end-to-end encryption, and management features to control channels and settings. Zello is a free app used by millions worldwide as a reliable and secure way to connect with friends, family, and community to stay in touch as well as to organize in times of urgency.

What devices does Zello work on?
iOS, Android, Windows, Mac, iPads, iPhones, and even some Android-based feature phones: Zello works with any devices and operating systems you prefer to work on.


Zello is the #1 digital two way radio app with over 150 million users in over 200 countries. Frontline workers, teams, and communities stay connected, safe, and productive. Zello turns your phone into a walkie talkie that works anvwhere in the world as long as you are connected to the internet!

Drivers, taxi and delivery dispatchers, construction workers, enterprise fleet managers, retail associates and hotel staff love using Zello to locate their team members, communicate critical information, and get work done. Zello has even replaced 2-way radios at these jobs, eliminating cross-talk, extending communication range, and taking advantage of already deployed smartphones and tablets.
Millions more use Zello instead of texting or calling: for private chats with a friend, for a live group call with your family, to coordinate routes on a hiking adventure, or to set up a soccer practice.

• Talk with free live voice over any carrier or Wi-Fi connection in crystal clear quality
• Organize communication in channels of up 6000 users
• Send photos, text, or location to coworkers or friends instantly
• Replay messages later
• Use with countless compatible devices and push-to-talk accessories - even radios
• See who's available or busy
• Free with no ads
• #1 choice of companies like Hilton, Honda, and YRC Freight


Zello 是排名第一的数字双向无线电应用程序,在 200 多个国家/地区拥有超过 1.5 亿用户。 一线员工、团队和社区保持联系、安全和高效。  Zello 将您的手机变成对讲机,只要您连接到互联网,就可以在世界任何地方使用!
 司机、出租车和送货调度员、建筑工人、企业车队经理、零售员工和酒店员工喜欢使用 Zello 来定位他们的团队成员、传达关键信息并完成工作。  Zello 甚至在这些工作中替换了 2 路无线电,消除了串扰,扩大了通信范围,并利用了已经部署的智能手机和平板电脑。
 数以百万计的人使用 Zello 而不是发短信或打电话:与朋友私聊、与家人进行实时群组通话、协调远足探险路线或安排足球练习。

 • 通过任何运营商或 Wi-Fi 连接以水晶般清晰的质量进行免费实时语音通话
 • 在多达 6000 个用户的渠道中组织交流
 • 立即将照片、文本或位置发送给同事或朋友
 • 稍后重播消息
 • 与无数兼容设备和一键通配件——甚至收音机一起使用
 • 查看谁有空或忙碌
 • 免费,无广告
 • 希尔顿、本田和 YRC Freight 等公司的第一选择

Shipping:
Please call
us at 0800 429 429 to get a shipping cost quote before you buy.  We are base in Takapuna, North Shore, Auckland.

We have been serving the locals for Takapuna, North Shore, Auckland since 2011 for mobile phone and computer repair since 2011, give us a go and we promise not waste your time!  After all, we have "been keeping you in touch since 2011".

Let us sort you out on crack screen repair for Galaxy Tabtablets, laptopsmartphones; liquid damage, impact damage, data recovery and insurance report

Please text us if you need support or online product queries.

Dr Mobiles Limited
1, Huron Street
Takapuna, Auckland 0622
Toll: 0800 429 429
Email - Website - Facebook - Twitter - Map

Monday, December 26, 2011

PocketToolX Mako Titanium Bike Tool

Made with Aerospace grade titanium PocketToolX Mako Tool is a all-in-one tool for bikers including screwdriver, box wrench, spoke wrench, and bottle opener. Its 3.5 inches compact size make easy fit in pocket.


This post sponsored by:
Dr Mobiles Limited
1 Huron Street, Takapuna, North Shore 0622
Tel: (09) 551-5344 and Mob: (021) 264-0000
Web - Map - Email - Posterous - Twitter - Blogger - Flickr -  Auhtor
Blog Flux Scramble - Email Encryption and JavaScript Protection Submit Blog Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Google Top Personal blogs    

Sunday, May 24, 2009

The 911 True Stories: Stupid and Dumb Crooks. David Lim, Auckland, New Zealand

Criminals have unintentionally turned themselves in by calling 911.

Just after midnight on 20 November 1986, in Kansas City, Missouri, Cell phone three policemen followed up on a mysterious 911 call. The emergency dispatcher had given them the address (traceable by computer) but was unable to describe the problem because the caller had hung up as soon as the 911 operator had answered the phone. Could it be a hostage taking? A medical emergency? The policemen dispatched to the scene had no idea what they might be walking into.

At the address they'd been sent to investigate, the officers found 1.25 lbs. of cocaine, more than 500 grams of crack, two pistols, and more than $12,000 in cash . . . as well as three very surprised crooks. Though the three people in the apartment fled, two of them (Pauline Webley, 27, of Florida and Geneive Hyde, 32, of New York) were later caught and charged with possession of cocaine.

What had happened to bring the police to the criminals' door? The ring members had called the cops on themselves. One of them had tried to dial 921, the first few digits of their leader's phone number, but had instead reached the police emergency number.

In October 2004, a quite similar incident occurred in the aptly-named town of Callaway, Florida.
Vicki Lynn Nunnery, 43, inadvertently dialed 911 when she was trying to call someone else and — unfortunately for her — rather than staying on the line to explain her mistake to a dispatcher, she quickly hung up. What Ms. Nunnery didn't realize is that standard procedure for police is to send an officer to investigate all 911 disconnections, and so a sheriff's deputy was routed to swing by her home address and check up on her.

When the investigating deputy arrived at Ms. Nunnery's house, he smelled the distinct odor of methamphetamines and contacted narcotics agents, who obtained a search warrant for the premises. The agents' search soon disclosed that the three-bedroom home was serving as one the largest methamphetamine laboratories ever found in Bay County, and officers arrested Ms. Nunnery and Vito James Knowles, 44, on several drug trafficking and weapons charges.

Were these crooks unusual? Far from it: crooks unwittingly call the cops on themselves with surprising regularity by connecting to 911 emergency services (and sometimes older cordless phones actually dial 911 themselves). Consider the following oddball cases:

* December 2008; Middletown, New York:
A trio of thieves intent upon stealing car parts from an auto body shop in upstate New York foiled themselves when the cell phone one of them was carrying "pocket dialed" 911, resulting in police overhearing their conversation as they were robbing the place: "You better come! We're getting the tires — just shut the car off. They're going to think we're stealing it!" The GPS function on the phone led police straight to the miscreants.

* April 2005; Rogersville, Tennessee:
Hawkins County authorities were tipped off to two would-be burglars' plans to steal a refrigerator from a mobile home dealership when a cell phone one of the crooks was carrying in his front pocket relayed a 40-minute-long discussion about the upcoming heist to 911 dispatchers. (The phone was of a type that automatically calls 911 when the '9' key is held down.) Sheriff's deputies hid in the woods near the dealership and nabbed the hapless thieves as they exited one of the mobile homes with a refrigerator and set it on the ground outside.

* March 1997; San Diego, California: Trying to call Mexico, a drug dealer dialed 911 instead of 011. Though he hung up when the emergency services operator answered, a police patrol was dispatched to his address. Four bad guys were arrested and 42 lbs. of marijuana and 2 oz. of methamphetamine were seized.

* February 1996; Frederick, Maryland: A lad called 911 to report the shed he was growing marijuana in was on fire. He got 60 days.

* August 1996; Los Angeles, California: Yet another failed attempt to call Mexico netted this drug dealer a visit from John Law. A gun, $15,000 and a 3 lb. bag of powdered cocaine were discovered at this fellow's house.

* February 1994; Laguna Nigel, California: A man programming his phone to speed-dial 911 (Huh? The number is that hard to remember?) was arrested when sheriff's deputies responded to his call. He and his two buddies appeared to be under the influence of crystal methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia was found in the apartment, so the three of them were placed under arrest.

* February 1990; San Diego, California: A phone programmed to automatically dial 911 when bumped or dropped gave this set of crooks away. Police discovered 250-300 marijuana plants growing in the house they'd been sent to investigate.