I forgot to mention using GPS are use up an app called MotionX-GPS GPS uses the 
GPS to track my hiking and it’s a fantastic app and it works quite well but 
like yourself I also like and use paper maps there is no substitute as far as 
I’m concerned for a good paper map boy are you talk about getting hard to find 
the old bales of getting a free me up in the gas station are gone

Jim

Sent from my iPhoneX

On Jun 13, 2019, at 6:28 AM, Charles Loving <lovingi...@gmail.com> wrote:

Smart phones.
 I had a nifty Samsung something that did all manner of things. The screen was 
way too little for my ancient eyes. The teeny ap things were impossible for my 
fumble fingers. I kept pushing the wrong buttons and calling porn-hub or some 
such. I had two of them and tossed them in a drawer with my four Kindle 
machines. I went back to a dumb phone that does one thing, call people and get 
rob calls. It will text I think but I don't do that because it is a pain in the 
culo,It does have tetris and a phone book. As for GPS i dug up my road atlas of 
Texas and a state highway may with Dolph Briscoe on the cover. It still works. 
No one calls out here in Deer Corn, there is still no service. My land line 
still works quite well.

> On Wed, Jun 12, 2019 at 11:18 PM JamesJasek <caver...@hot.rr.com> wrote:
> Nonsense 
> 
> Sent from my iPhoneX
> 
> On Jun 12, 2019, at 9:32 PM, David <dlocklea...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I needed to get a new smartphone for my business.
> 
> I chose the cheap route by 2019 standards.  I now have a shiny new Coolpad 
> Legacy from MetroPCS.  This phone falls into "phablet" category.   It 
> requires two hands to use and is very heavy.
> 
> After 24 hours of using the Legacy, I can say that the fingerprint scanner is 
> better than previous cheapo-phones that I have used.
> 
> Watching YouTube or surfing the web, etc in landscape position with a 
> kickstand is better than on a small smartphone.
> 
> I see now why Steve Jobs was so adamant about keeping the iPhone light and 
> small.   Most people are going to find using the Legacy as a phone to be 
> difficult.  It would be deadly to drive and hold this phone.
> 
> Navigation is a plus as the Legacy replaces the need for most small portable 
> navigation devices for cars.
> 
> Think of the Legacy more as a crappy Garmin navigation device that makes 
> cell-phone calls.
> 
> Playing simple games on the Legacy such as Freecell is better than on a 
> regular smartphone .
> 
> It comes with Android 9 and a Type "C" USB which was unheard of in this price 
> category.
> 
> What this phone does is set the bar for future cheapo-smartphones.
> 
> Once we get a real smartphone operating system ( like the upcoming Fuchsia OS 
> ) these cheapo-smartphones be will be even more amazing and at the same time, 
> taken for granted in the future by today"s young people.
> 
> David Locklear
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-- 
Charlie Loving
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