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The Fatal Flaw That Will Keep You From Using Google Voice as Your Single Phone Number

google voice tall

Google Voice has been touted as the one number to use in place of your others, since a call to your Voice number will ring all of your phones.  Indeed, between that feature and several others, Voice is handy.  For full details on Voice, check out our Google Voice Primer.  Google Voice isn’t without shortcomings, though.  We covered five of them last year (a couple of those have since been fixed).  Somehow, though, we missed Voice’s biggest shortcoming, that will prevent it from ever being a replacement telephone number for many people.

Voice’s biggest shortcoming is that it doesn’t support the sending of photos by text message (MMS).  Did you know that?  I didn’t, until recently.  I finally ordered an Android phone, and was excited to start telling everyone that I had a new phone number – my Google Voice number.  A day before my new phone arrived, someone tried to send me an MMS message, so that I could open it at my computer via the Voice web interface.  That message never arrived.  Worse, neither I nor the sender were alerted to the fact that it had failed.  The message fell off into a black hole, never to be seen again.  Sure enough, a quick look online revealed that Voice doesn’t support MMS.

MMS?  Isn’t that what those kids use today?  Why would I ever need that?  That’s probably what many of you are thinking.  I fall into that category, too – about 98% of the time.  I only receive a handful of MMS messages a year.  When I do receive them, though, they tend to be important, and not just for kicks.

My recourse is to not use Voice as my primary number, or to tell people that I have one number for calls and normal text messages, and another for picture texts.  I’m still undecided, primarily because I love Voice’s other features so much.  The risk is that I then need to trust that other users will remember that I have a separate MMS number.  If they forget, they’ll never know that I’m not getting their messages, and I won’t even know they’ve been sending them.

What would you decide?


Test Your Phone Settings (or Find Your Phone) With Wheresmycellphone.com

wheresmycellphone

If you’re a Google Voice user, you’ve probably been there – you want to test out the forwarding on your phone, or see if the call presentation feature is working properly.  If you’ve tied all of your phones to Google Voice, though, and set those phones to have direct access to voicemail, you can’t call yourself to test out your settings.  Enter wheresmycellphone.com.

Whereismycellphone does one thing, and one thing only.  It calls your phone.  The site markets itself as a tool to ring your phone so that you can find it, but I’ve used it to test out my Google Voice settings.  You enter your number, specify when your phone should ring (immediately, or up to five minutes in the future), and hit the “Make it ring” button.

What tools do you use to ring your phone, or test out your forwarding settings?

Where’s my cellphone.com


Posterous Digest – Affordable GPS, and Google Voice Improvements

40techposterous It is time for another digest of recent content on 40Tech’s Posterous site, where we post content that is too brief for this site, but too long for Twitter.  Since the last digest, our Posterous site has taken a look at the following items:

 

Turn By Turn GPS Navigation for GPS for $35 Bucks?? — CoPilot Live 8 – An affordable GPS app for the iPhone, Android, and Windows Mobile (Touchscreen and Smartphone) looks intriguing, given the price.

Google is Listening to My Google Voice Suggestions – Google has made some improvements to Google Voice that address two of our earlier concerns.

 

If any of those headlines interest you, check out the 40Tech Posterous site.