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Hi,
I have a CDMA Touch from Telus Mobility in Canada.
The issue I am having is # rings with incoming calls.
I am using latest Jawbone Bluetooth headset, when I have an incoming call, I receive 2 rings and calls goes to voice mail.
I have called HTC Support and Telus support, they have no solution.
Is there a setting to modify the number of rings for incoming calls?
dave3211
If you're talking about the number of rings before the voicemail kicks in, yes there is a solution if your phone number is in Alberta or BC.
I dont know what Alberta or BC is...
but on my phone i do it like this...
Start->Settings->click phone->'Services(dono if it's called this, second tab)
There is a list, in that list there should be (again, dono the english word) 'forward to'
click Get Settings...
now u can set the number of secunds before it connects the call to voicemail..
with the intervals 5,10,15,20,25,30 seconds (at least with my phone provider)
hope this helps
thanks nisse thats very helpfull.
by the way forward to is call forwarding.
Excellent!!
NisseDILLIGAF said:
I dont know what Alberta or BC is...
but on my phone i do it like this...
Start->Settings->click phone->'Services(dono if it's called this, second tab)
There is a list, in that list there should be (again, dono the english word) 'forward to'
click Get Settings...
now u can set the number of secunds before it connects the call to voicemail..
with the intervals 5,10,15,20,25,30 seconds (at least with my phone provider)
hope this helps
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Been trying to sort this out for years...nice one and thanks!!
NisseDILLIGAF said:
I dont know what Alberta or BC is...
but on my phone i do it like this...
Start->Settings->click phone->'Services(dono if it's called this, second tab)
There is a list, in that list there should be (again, dono the english word) 'forward to'
click Get Settings...
now u can set the number of secunds before it connects the call to voicemail..
with the intervals 5,10,15,20,25,30 seconds (at least with my phone provider)
hope this helps
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nice one indeed. thank you!!
3 rings delay in incoming call
Hi,
This might be due to another related issue:
There is delay of 3 rings before the diamond actually starts ringing.
i.e, after the caller has heard 3 rings, only then the diamond starts ringing, and by the time you pick the call, there will be many rings and it will go to answer phone as usual.
As soon as there is an incoming call, the light starts blinking. But there is a delay in the ringer/vibrate. You can try this out by calling from another phone.
This might be cause for your issue.
I too am having the same problem, and I'm searching for a solution. Maybe some cab which fixes the 3 rings dealy in incoming call... I'm sure there must be some such cab. Still going through the threads in the forum.
Could anybody please point us to a fix if you know...
Thks,
Sandeep
I've got the same problem on my touch pro..
It's even worse actually - I'm experimenting, but it seems like half the time the phone *never rings* when wifi is on and if it's asleep...
What the???
-mark
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=2793104#post2793104
its a setting by your phone provider
yeah ive been testing the same problem with mine ringin from my nokia you hear it ringing out but the touch is still a sleap and bingo like you said 3 rings later it fires into action
ive also searched about - downloaded a new rom but still has the glitch
anyone sorted this out yet !! please post if you have a link to the cure
sandeepn81 said:
Hi,
This might be due to another related issue:
There is delay of 3 rings before the diamond actually starts ringing.
i.e, after the caller has heard 3 rings, only then the diamond starts ringing, and by the time you pick the call, there will be many rings and it will go to answer phone as usual.
As soon as there is an incoming call, the light starts blinking. But there is a delay in the ringer/vibrate. You can try this out by calling from another phone.
This might be cause for your issue.
I too am having the same problem, and I'm searching for a solution. Maybe some cab which fixes the 3 rings dealy in incoming call... I'm sure there must be some such cab. Still going through the threads in the forum.
Could anybody please point us to a fix if you know...
Thks,
Sandeep
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think that he's referring to the 3 second delay built into most phones. On earlier devices this was fixed by changing the polling time in the phone programming. (often referred to as the Slot Cycle Index). I haven't tried it on my Diamond as I haven't noticed that much of a lag.
Since I was thinking about it, I decided to try. I changed my SCI from 2 to 0.
I did look and found that I don't have that "Forward to" option in my phone settings. Probably a provider change.
if this is in wrong place mods please remove
im trying to barr someone from calling my phone can someone please let me know,thanks
this issue is now fixed,many thanks to all .......
mattdehat said:
if this is in wrong place mods please remove
im trying to barr someone from calling my phone can someone please let me know,thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try using CALL FIREWALL i believe you can block numbers using this
http://www.freewarepocketpc.net/ppc-download-call-firewall-v1-4.html
mattdehat said:
if this is in wrong place mods please remove
im trying to barr someone from calling my phone can someone please let me know,thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
CallFirwall is free but not perfect as you will hear the first ring "unless u edit the ringtone" also you still see the missed call.
Magicall is a pay for software but has alot of options and also works invisibly so you don't see the missed call etc.
Clarification needed...
i'm curious about the whole call barring topic in a technical sense...(why you would want to bar a caller is a social issue )
first i will describe what i know...followed by my question...
my network returns the following announcements for outgoing calls:
1. base case...the call succeeds and i will hear a ringing tone
2. number dialed is busy..."the number you have dialed is busy at the moment, please try later". i hear this immediately if the dialed number doesn't support call waiting.
3. number dialed has declined the call...i will hear a ringing tone until declined...once declined, the announcement is the same as 2 above.
4. being placed on the dialed number's call waiting queue..."the number you have dialed is on another line, please hold"
5. number dialed is powered off (gracefully i assume)..."the number you have dialed is powered off, please try later"...see also 6 below
6. number dialed is unreachable (due to ungraceful shutdown or cell tower down or the dialed number has reception issues)..."the number you have dialed is not responding at the moment, please try later"
when i go in Settings->Personal->Phone and on the "Services" tab, i retrieve settings for the listed "Call Barring" service, i get options to bar (at the network level i presume) incoming and outgoing calls (unconditionally, doesn't matter who is calling or who is being called, respectively) and the only conditions i can set for the "Block incoming calls" category are "Off", "All calls", & "When roaming". Similarly, the conditions for the "Block outgoing calls" category are "Off", "All calls", "International", and "International except to home country".
my question is: what kind of message will a caller get (who i have barred) if i have barred him/her as a result of:
1. unconditional barring of incoming calls set at the network level via Settings->Personal->Phone?
2. barred via software (as suggested in this thread) installed on my phone?
would it be message 2? or 3? or 5 or 6 even?
i'd appreciate any useful clarifications just out of curiosity
hello everyone,is there anything that you can do to make your phone ring longer like 45 seconds or a minute? thx
i guess no one knows how to do this because i have no responses as of now
You mean ring longer at what?
i think he means he wants the phone to ring longer when a call comes in. instead of cutting off the cycle at ~30sec it would be ~1min. am i right TopDogg1?
yes,that is what i want. thx for any help i recieve
TopDogg1 said:
yes,that is what i want. thx for any help i recieve
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sure, here's what I do, the instructions might be different based on your carrier.
Hit the green button, dial 611. When customer service answers, ask them to increase your ring time.
last pow off?ohf....
Hi, I had a similar problem and it was the setting for when a call was forwarded to voicemail. It turned out to be easily changed
On tmobile in the UK you can go into Settings and then Phone and choose the Services tab.
On here you can choose when the call is forwarded to voicemail and other conditions. The Kaiser reads the Network settings then you can change them and it will update the network for you.
Cheers
John
how do you do that under network i didnt fine anything pertaining to that
I woke up yesterday morning and had an idea for an app...
Now im not a coder so im not sure how easy it would be but im thinking alot of it should be pretty simple.
Now to the core of the app.
My thoughts are for an app that goes and retrieves your voicemail and saves it as a mp3 on your phone.
1. When a message is recieved from a certain number the app is triggered
2. The app starts recording the voice mail that is left.
3. (this is the tricky part) detect when the voicemail has finish and send the no. to delete the message. For my voicemail i press 3 to delete the messages.
4. Hang up the call and save the message to your phone.
Now there is a few reasons behind this.
It will save on money for some people, as i know here in Aus some companies charge to ring your voicemail no. So this app could download it and you could listen to it as much as possible.
If its important you could save it off to your computer or email to someone else to listen to.
As i said im not a coder but i thought this might be a good idea for someont o look into. Would have been good for the ADC2 but entries have finished for that now.
Anyway if any developers want to run with this go a head.
Great idea! But it has already been done. Check the market
seriously, lol
Whats the name of it
Thanks for the heads up
pf fusion voicemail, youmail I think, tmobile visual voicemail. I personally use pf fusion visual voicemail. It saves the messages to your sd card, has a nice user interface, and also backs them up to their server so you can retrieve them online.
lookout4theyeti said:
pf fusion voicemail, youmail I think, tmobile visual voicemail. I personally use pf fusion visual voicemail. It saves the messages to your sd card, has a nice user interface, and also backs them up to their server so you can retrieve them online.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
youmail does exactly the same thing. in addition to that, if you buy a youmail premium subscription (they have several levels depending on how many voicemails you regularly get) you can get the voicemails transcribed to text and displayed as well.
another one to add to the list is google voice. also does the above mentioned features.
Thanks for your suggestions everyone.
There is an issue with the suggestions though.
I live in Australia and all the options are for the US.
YouMail and PhoneFusion both need your voicmail to be diverted to them and GoogleVoice isnt here yet.
What I was thinking of is something that runs from your phone.
The App calls your pre defined Voicemail number and records the message and saves it to your phone.
Would work worldwide and you wouldnt need to change your voicemail details.
Anyway, just a thought
I understand what you're trying to say and from a developer standpoint, I can fill you in as to why it wouldnt work.
First, voicemail is like call forwarding. After your phone stops ringing, nothing is actually happening on your phone. The call is forwarded after a preset number of rings, or an action (like pressing the end key to ignore the call) to a voicemail server, which answers and records the message. At that point, your phone is completely out of the loop, so the idea of having it record to both the phone and the voicemail server is dead right there because it just cant be done. The way youmail, t-mobile vvm, google voice and phonefusion simulate this is by recording the message on their servers and then downloading it to your phone using your data connection.
Now, it would be possible to have your phone do the recording after a certain number of rings, like an answering machine, but it would be ridiculously process intensive because it would have to be running at all times. This would do two things:
1. slow down your phone considerably.
2. eat battery like you wouldnt believe.
And whats the point of having something like this if your phone is going to be dead all the time and unable to record messages anyway?
So yes, its possible, but not feasible. GV should be in australia soon, seeing as the wave development team is entirely based there. So keep your fingers crossed until then.
ok I wanted this app too, but you think too hard.
Disable provider voicemail.
After 10 rings, let phone pick up call and play message. Then a beep, and the phone starts recording.
No external voicemail server needed, just have an anwering machine application.
kusotare said:
Now, it would be possible to have your phone do the recording after a certain number of rings, like an answering machine, but it would be ridiculously process intensive because it would have to be running at all times. This would do two things:
1. slow down your phone considerably.
2. eat battery like you wouldnt believe.
And whats the point of having something like this if your phone is going to be dead all the time and unable to record messages anyway?
So yes, its possible, but not feasible.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Why would slow your phone down so much? It could be service, not doing anything untill a call is recieved. If it rings too long it takes over.
It doesn't need to record all the time.
Try HulloMail
can't find HulloMail in the market
i also would like to have this "answering machine" app... and I also don't understand why this would slow down the phone, or eat up a lot of battery. as someone said already, it would run in the background (like "toggle settings" "missed call" and all the other services do) and just really start to work when a call comes in and it has to play a message and record the callers message.
the only downside (with which i can live) is certainly that the phone has to be switched on all the time, because off it couldn't record anything. for me that is no problem, i have a docking station at home and in the office, so when i am not running around, it is charged.
technically i see this as very feasible
i wonder whether devs shy away from this... because actually doing this is a major attack at the "revenue machine" of mobile operators, because - well - a local soft answering machine would take a huge amount of calling minutes away from the operators.
kusotare said:
First, voicemail is like call forwarding. After your phone stops ringing, nothing is actually happening on your phone. The call is forwarded after a preset number of rings, or an action (like pressing the end key to ignore the call) to a voicemail server, which answers and records the message. At that point, your phone is completely out of the loop, so the idea of having it record to both the phone and the voicemail server is dead right there because it just cant be done.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually that's not exactly true. If you take a look in the Android Call Settings. Under GSM/CDMA Call Settings > Call Forwarding, you'll see that Call Forwarding when busy, unanswered and unreachable can all be disabled. It's possible one could write a program to catch the call after it rings X times, but I'm not sure if Android has that kind of hook in its API yet.
But as for it being impossible due to the forwarding, that's utterly false.
Quite simple.
Cancel the carrier answering service. (I hate the term "voicemail" -- everyone who uses it should be shot dead).
Have the program answer the phone after some defined number of rings and record it.
1) It would NOT slow down your phone.
2) It would NOT eat battery.
Don't know where that guy got the idea that it would... it WON'T.
This is not a Nexus 4 specific issue, but rather a general CM10.1 issue.
The stock CM10.1 phone app normally does a good job of blacklisting numbers - but when you have the phone connected to a Bluetooth handsfree, and the blacklisted number attempts to call you, then the Bluetooth handsfree will start ringing and it's impossible to stop the ringing unless the caller gives up or you disconnect the Bluetooth.
The handsfree device in question is the Ford Sync system built into my car. Earlier today, I blacklisted the number 6474964196 (for others who live in Toronto, blacklist it too!) after realizing it was a scam to impersonate the bank TD. Later, when I was driving out of the office with the phone connected via Bluetooth, my car started ringing and displayed that very number on my GPS screen as an incoming call. I kept rejecting the call using my steering wheel button, but the caller didn't relent.
The whole time, my phone screen itself did not show any signs on an incoming call. Normally when I drive I keep my phone in the cupholder, and if it gets an incoming call from a non-blacklisted number, the screen turns on and shows me the number along with a big red button to reject the call. But with the incoming call being from a blacklisted number, the screen remained off.
After failing repeatedly to silence that call, I had to wait till I got to a red light so I could manually turn off the Bluetooth. At the same time, I noticed the phone app showed nothing from the blacklisted number in my missed-calls log.
I'll report this on Jira later. In the meantime, does anyone know of an alternative call blacklist app that doesn't allow a Bluetooth handsfree to ring when a blacklisted number calls me?
I previously used root call blocker pro to block calls. I don't use Bluetooth so I can't say if it'll help you out.
You can also add the number to your contacts, then go into the contracts app and have all calls go to voicemail. CM's method is better because it doesn't let them go to voicemail.
Yes, there is a bug in there. I now use root call blocker.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 4 Beta
I use true caller to block calls. It even has option to block numbers marked as spam by other users
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Thanks for the suggestions guys. I'll use root call blocker and see.
I just create a contact names no answer and add the number there, with the option to send calls to voicemail. Now my phone won't ring when they call, and when I wipe and flash a new ROM, the blacklist numbers all carry over with my Google contacts. I have about 15 blacklisted numbers there.
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