Results 16 to 28 of 28
Thread: Beyond tomorrow
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16th February 2006, 01:28 PM #16
Rocky,
If you are having one for emergencies and you don’t know how to use it then how bloody good is it?
Sadly a lot of people get one because of the “what if my car broke down in the middle of nowhere” thing.
My MIL got one for the same reason 4 years ago. She used it a few things in the first few weeks and it has been sitting on the kitchen bench since.
Unless it cooks me bacon and eggs, I ain’t getting one.
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16th February 2006, 01:59 PM #17
Scott,
Actually my wife normally carries it in her bag, and she knows how to use it. I am prepared to take my chances without it. I doubt if I am likely to come to much harm on the highway between Elimbah and Caboolture, where the traffic is pretty light.
When I worked as a geologist in Tanzania, I had no means of communication when I was hundreds of miles out in the bush - I just used to drive to town once a month to collect my mail. I suppose that I was fortunate that I was never faced with a life-threatening emergency. But I liked the sense of freedom that it gave, not having a boss breathing down your neck. Modern-day geologists don't need to be self-reliant, since they have satellite phones and GPS devices, so they can always call for help, and they can't get lost.
Rocker
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16th February 2006, 02:22 PM #18
Great in emergencies, you break down and ring the RACV, you get a recorded message and put on hold, just as you get through after waiting an eternity it either, runs out of credit or the battery goes flat.
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16th February 2006, 02:22 PM #19Originally Posted by Rocker
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16th February 2006, 02:25 PM #20
Just use "The Ghost Who Walks", aka Mr Walkers drum connection, just remember to drum "0" to get an outside line.
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16th February 2006, 02:46 PM #21Originally Posted by Rocker
Has that clock gone to your head or something???
P (very concerned!)
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16th February 2006, 04:22 PM #22Deceased
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Originally Posted by Wongo
The number is a closely guarded secret, only known to my wife and daughter, so if I'm not home they can contact me in an emergency.
Peter.
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16th February 2006, 05:11 PM #23
I'm with you Wongo. I don't have a mobile phone. I thought I was the only one in Australia.
Those are my principles, and if you don't like them . . . well, I have others.
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16th February 2006, 06:38 PM #24Originally Posted by Sturdee
Now, Peter, about that timber you were going to get for me...
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16th February 2006, 06:39 PM #25
One that has a bigger key pad would come in handy........
if you always do as you have always done, you will always get what you have always got
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16th February 2006, 06:42 PM #26Originally Posted by zenwood
Must have been desperate! As a fellow Yottie, I'd have thought that he could dished out a few h/held VHF radios to his crew, and schieved the same result for a lot less - so long as he didn't give a radio to his SWMBO
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16th February 2006, 07:46 PM #27
If you have a PocketPC phone you can run the PocketPC versions of the stair calculator at
http://www.blocklayer.com/Stairs
and the PocketPC versions of the concrete block calculators at
http://www.blocklayer.com
but it'll never catch on
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16th February 2006, 08:01 PM #28Deceased
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Originally Posted by Auld Bassoon
By all means try and see if you can find out the number but I must warn you that it isn't even in my name.
In any case if it rings and the callers ID doesn't belong to the phone numbers programmed in the phone I ignore it, as it must be spam.:eek: To me my mobile is not a way for the world to communicate with me but the way I can communicate with the world.
Maybe that is unusual, but it is me.
Peter.
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