Posts Tagged ‘email’

How To Send An Anonymous Text Or MMS Message

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

So you want to send someone a text, but you don’t want them to know it’s you, eh? Maybe you just want to have a little fun with a friend or you may have other reasons. Whatever the case, it’s pretty simple to do. Just follow the instructions below and you’ll be leaving confused looks on people’s faces in no time.

President Obama Text Message

How To Email A Text Message

First, you have to know their phone number and mobile carrier (AT&T, Verizon, etc.). Armed with a phone number and the list below, you should be able to easily figure out the email address to send a text message to your victim’s phone.

T-Mobile: phonenumber@tmomail.net
Virgin Mobile: phonenumber@vmobl.com
Cingular: phonenumber@cingularme.com
Sprint: phonenumber@messaging.sprintpcs.com
Verizon: phonenumber@vtext.com
Nextel: phonenumber@messaging.nextel.com
US Cellular: phonenumber@email.uscc.net
SunCom: phonenumber@tms.suncom.com
Powertel: phonenumber@ptel.net
AT&T: phonenumber@txt.att.net
Alltel: phonenumber@message.alltel.com
Metro PCS: phonenumber@MyMetroPcs.com

where phonenumber = your 10 digit phone number
(Thanks to tech-recipes.com for the list)

Get A Fake Email Account

The easiest way to do this is to head over to Gmail and create a free account. You want this free account because you’re only going to use it for this and you want to set up the name and address to be whatever you want.

gmail sign up

The screen shot above shows my new account as B Obama with an email address of prez-b-obama@gmail.com, but I eventually went with President Obama and notreallyobama@gmail.com. Be creative.

Send A Text Message VIA Email

Now here’s the really easy part. Just compose an email from your new Gmail account. Send it to the address from the first step above. You might even leave the subject blank to make it look more like a text. The result might look like it did on my iPhone in the first image in this post, but be aware that some phones/carriers will display the email address, too, like my Verizon DROID Incredible below:

photo

You may also note that I tried to include an image on that one. My iPhone didn’t show the image or even indicate that there was one. The Verizon phone removed the image (and said as much) as seen above. I’ve had mixed results on other carriers. If you’re unsure, just do a test with another friend who’s on the same carrier.

With one more relatively simple step, you can actually spoof the email address as well. All this means is that you’ll make the email look like it’s coming from a more convincing address. In the past, this used to require some technical savvy and access to a server that would let you do it. Now, it’s as simple as downloading a free email spoofer and installing it. For me, this took about two minutes. Take a look at the image below compared to the one above. The one below shows a text that, to most people, looks like it came right from the White House. Of course, with the email spoofer, you don’t even need the Gmail account, but I like to use both.

photo

Share Your Results

I’m interested in what you’ll all be sending to your friends/co-workers/family with this. Let us know, below, about the fun you had and any reactions you got. And remember… This is meant to be for fun with a couple friends. Ultimately, stuff like this can get tracked back you you if you do something illegal with it. You’ve been warned.

Two More Reasons I Like the Peek

Monday, March 9th, 2009

I try to be as objective as possible when doing product reviews, which is why I insist upon having a sample I can play with myself. This is also why I am currently carrying around and talking on three different cell phones. Sometimes, I find that I should follow up a product review with new information and this is definitely one of those times. In the past week, I’ve learned of two new bits of information that make the Peek that I reviewed even more attractive.

No monthly fee option
Even though you get unlimited email and texting for about $20 a month, for someone like me, that seemed like a waste to pay monthly for something I already get in my iPhone. For someone without email capabilities on their phone, it’s a decent deal. After trying out a new pricing model of $399 for the Peek plus lifetime service, they found that given the choice, 70 percent opted for the one-time price. Frankly, I would, too. On the Peek site, you’ll pay (at the time of this writing) about $50 for the device and $20 per month. That means you’ll have spent just over the $399 one-time price in 18 months. If you think you’ll want one for more than a year and a half, the one-time price is the better deal.

Update your blog from it
If you blog, this is a new selling point for the Peek. It seems that Dan over at GeekyPeek.com installed Postie in WordPress and was able to update his blog from the Peek. (source: CrunchGear).

Getting a Peek at the Peek

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

One of the things that I can hardly do without is my email. My iPhone checks email, but the experience is somewhat lacking, and the software keyboard is good for short messages, but not long emails. On Valentine’s Day, I stopped by my mail box and found a Peek email device waiting for me. I was very excited to take it for a test drive and I carried it around for a week, having it constantly download email and remind me about new messages.

Peek -

Simplicity in design
The Peek’s design is nothing innovative or shocking, but then it doesn’t neet to be, either. This device has one purpose and that’s to let you read and send emails while on the go. On the front is a decently sized screen and a full keyboard. The screen is very bright and easy to read, which is a plus because I was walking around or in a moving car most of the time I was looking at it. The keyboard is more than just the full qwerty. It also includes a lock key and a couple of the special keys are moved to support it’s intended use. For example, you’ll never have to hit SHIFT to get the @ symbol on this thing, making it easier to type in email addresses.

Peek - Keyboard cropped

The left side of the Peek has a microUSB port which can be used to charge the battery or connect it to your computer. On the right is a scroll wheel and a univesral back button. It’s designed for right-handers like me to scroll with the flick of the thumb, but the scroll wheel doesn’t seem to move too fluidly, although I prefer that to one that moves every time you accidentally brush against it. The scroll wheel can also be pressed in towards the screen to launch a menu and make selections. Above the screen, there is also a small envelope image that flashes blue when you have new emails.

Getting set up
When you start the Peek up for the first time, you’re greeted with a welcome screen while it searches for service. Once it connects to the network, you’re ready to go through (or skip) the small walk through and start adding email accounts. One thing that I liked right away was that I didn’t have to set up anything to get connected. The Peek connects to its own network, so there’s no need to hunt down a network administrator and type in a bunch of information. Instead, it’s pre-configured to connect to the only network it needs. The simple setup involves just entering your first and last name, email address, and your email password. When setting up my work email account, my Peek told me that it doesn’t support that type of account and that I need to call Peek support for help. I tried with a different account, which took about 30 seconds to validate before informing me that the setup was complete. The advantage here is that the simple, one screen setup got into one of my accounts so easily that pretty much anyone could get up and running on this thing without outside help. The disadvantage of this extreme simplification is that even a super geek like me will need to call for help with certain types of accounts. Future versions of the operating software might benefit from an option to enter an advanced setup screen to provide more information if known. Not only would this free up the phones more for those customers who really need the help, but it would allow someone like me to get up and running a little faster.

Sending and receiving email
One of the things that I really liked about the Peek was the ability to read emails on the screen clearly and without a lot of effort.

Peek - Email and Spam cropped

The screen is bright, and for me the font and text size were perfectly suited for easy reading. Deleting emails was pretty simple, almost too simple, in fact. I once hit the delete button while reading an email, thinking it was the “back” button, and my email vanished. Maybe the next Peek could have a red delete button for those of us who move too quickly. I also had problems trying to delete more than one email, when a feature that I was pretty happy about didn’t work very smoothly. If you want to delete multiple emails, you just hold down the Shift key and scroll to highlight the emails to delete. When doing this, it would often think I released the Shift key, unhighlighting everything I had highlighted. I don’t know if this was due to new emails coming in or some other factor, but it made deleting a lot of email at once a little more difficult.

Sending email was simple, as well. I simply told it I wanted to send an email by way of a click, a scroll, and a second click, entered a recipient and a subject and then wrote my short email. You can also select a contact and use the contact’s menu to send an email to them. The new email will already include your signature, which defaults to “Sent on the go from my Peek”, but can be changed in the email account settings. I hoped to find a “SEND” button on the screen. Instead, the Peek has you click in the scroll wheel and choose “Send”. This, perhaps, is because there are some additional options in the email menu, like “CC:”, “BCC:”, and “Save as a Draft”, which is great if you want to read through and reply to emails on that long flight while in “Airplane mode”. I’d still like to see a “SEND” button, but I’m happy to have the other features there, too.

Conclusions
While the Peek includes plenty of options and settings like themes, different sounds and alerts, display settings (standard, battery saver, or battery hog), airplane mode, date and time (network or self-set), and security lock, unlike some other full-featured devices, it remembered what it was designed for, and that’s to read and send emails on the go. Little things like BCC: and Save as a Draft, are the type of really appreciated features that can be easily forgotten or set aside in lieu of a camera or some other non-email selling point, and I’m glad that hasn’t happened here.

For a techie like me, it seems a bit unnecessary, as I already have a phone that reads email and I take my laptop when I travel. For the business traveler or anyone else with a phone that doesn’t read email, it’s the perfect solution for a reasonable monthly fee. As long as it isn’t side-tracked in the future with built-in instant messaging, a camera, or other non-email junk, the Peek should remain the obvious choice for those who just want an ultra-portable email-only solution.