Old cellphones, in my household ...
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Useless (Score:1)
Technology changes quickly. Old cell phones become incompatible with new networks in about a decade or two. I have a startac from 1998 that only makes analog calls. Analog has been dead for a long time. It isn't like a classic game or computer that are stand alone devices. It absolutely requires a network to be useful. Today's tablets will have the same fate as well as their unupgradable software, abandonded walled gardens, and network dependent features (such as running) go dark.
Re:Useless (Score:2)
What percentage of 'old' cellphones kept are older than 2 decades?
Re:Useless (Score:5, Funny)
What percentage of 'old' cellphones kept are older than 2 decades?
Zero. Only new cell phones are kept more than two decades.
A cell phone designed by the slashdot beta team would have tiny buttons on a big white field, and after pressing three buttons, you would have to click to expand the name. No seeing the phone number. And the users who protested would be called neckbeards opposed to change.
Re: Useless (Score:1)
I had a phone like that . It actually had touchpad buttons, a one line LCD screen. Could send SMS messages but the characters looked awful and you could only see 12 at any time.
Re: Useless (Score:1)
I thought that was called twitter?
Re:Useless (Score:4, Interesting)
I still have my Nokia Cityman somewhere. Big old brick of metal that would destroy the stairs if dropped... Real story, It flew out the window once while trying to rest it on my shoulder while driving my '79 Celica GT Coupe back in early '90s. Had to hunt the battery down the street, but apart from some scuffs and nicks (and a slightly bent antenna), it worked fine after being put back together. Those things should have been rated as weapons as they were virtually undestructible. Had an iPhone 3G, probably still in a box somewhere, now using a stupid phone (Moto V360 hacked for 4-bands since Rogers didn't think it was a good idea to let the phone use 850Mhz which penetrates buildings easier) because the battery lasts for an eternity between charges. And most importantly, it's used to make/receive calls. Besides, I'm pretty sure that thing lost about 20% of its mass with all the drops it went trough (and still running like a champ)
Re:Useless (Score:2)
I've got an old Motorola bag phone that's around 25 years old, does that count?
I hope so. I have one which is about that same era. It still works and the range can blow the socks off these tiny little models of the present -- assuming there's anything left in the way of repeaters which it can talk to.
Re:Useless (Score:2)
Today's tablets will have the same fate as well as their unupgradable software, abandonded walled gardens, and network dependent features (such as running) go dark.
don't know what you mean here. my tablet is largely independent. it depends on the network to download new software and use wifi to access the internet, so these things can go away. but it will be able to run existing software locally presumably until the end of time, or until the LCD bites the dust. it will last much longer than any Tandy or whatever from the 80's.
Re:Useless (Score:2)
Depends on how you define old.
True, my old analog phone has long since become a boat anchor, but my first digital phone still works. ( not that i would use it.. ). My (old) 3gs still works too. Its in a drawer as i moved to more open and larger screen androids, but no reason i couldn't shove my sim card back in and be up and running.
All of my tablets can side-load, so i'm not trapped in some walled garden, and besides, even if the world did move on and my 'market' vanished or refused to let me in, it doesn't mean that what i have now suddenly stops working. ( example my 3gs again.. it wont support iOS 7, but what is on there now keeps going.. )
Re:Useless (Score:4, Informative)
Depends on how you define old.
I defined it as "a phone I've replaced", regardless of the reason it was replaced.
Re:Useless (Score:2)
"Sure, my iPhone 3GS might be considered antiquated being unable to upgrade to iOS7"
That's a nice feature actually, iOS7 has a worse UI than 6 IMHO.
Re:Useless (Score:2)
My dad and godfather used to have those Moto Startacs. They would be able to use the phone while we were watching zero bars on our fancy GSM phones. (Unless I'm mistaking, Startacs used AMPS networks, right?)
Re:Useless (Score:2)
My concern are some devices that have to activate before being able to be used. What do they do when the activation servers get shut off, and this can be an Apple device, a device needing MotoBlur activation, or some other requirement of having to authenticate against something before the device will function.
My old Motorola Cliq with a custom ROM still functions on my wireless network as a caching DNS even though it has been SIM-less for a long time. Not a big use, but the more data that doesn't have to be pulled from the WAN pipe, the better.
Re:Useless (Score:2)
Will be interesting to see what happens. The analog-digital switch was a big one, but it happened so long ago now. GSM was introduced in the early 90s, so most people under 35 or so would never owned an analog phone, so even their oldest old mobile phone should still work. My oldest is from 1995 (so, 19 years old!) and it still works perfectly well (2G GSM). Calls, SMS texts and (very slow) data all work. Going into the future, since GSM seems to be remaining backwards compatible through all revisions so far, I suspect those old phones will continue to work for a long time yet (battery replacements notwithstanding).
I am guessing you are in North America (a phone from 1998 that only makes analog calls?!) America is a bit of an outlier here - it moved to analog very late and to this day still has a mix of network technologies in use (CDMA/GSM). Japan and Korea also run (or used to, at least) a mix, so similar story there. But in most other places, it's been GSM and GSM alone since the early-mid 90s so old phones are still quite useable.
Re: Useless (Score:3)
DICE wants to know: what are your cell phone buying habits? just asking, not for any particular reason.
Re: Useless (Score:1)
In that case: "They are cherished and cared for, and never replaced with some cheap piece of crap that fails to deliver the basic purpose of the old... cellphone", I emphasise for no particular reason.
Old cell phones are kids toys (Score:2)
The kids love to play with real cell phones with buttons, the older the better. Flip phones are the most fun. The old StarTAC and RAZR phones are the best toys, even better when the batteries work. With iphone/android phones you can still play games if they are still working, otherwise they are just paperweights without buttons,
Re:Old cell phones are kids toys (Score:5, Funny)
otherwise they are just paperweights without buttons,
Do most of your paperweights come with buttons?
Re:Old cell phones are kids toys (Score:3)
Do most of your paperweights come with buttons?
Only the old ones.
Re:Old cell phones are kids toys (Score:4, Insightful)
Take care with old phones as kid's toys. Even if they do not include service, they will still have the capability to dial 911 and the emergency services will disapprove of your children calling them with no reason...
Re:Old cell phones are kids toys (Score:3)
GSM phones without a SIM card *WILL* be able to dial 911. Remove the SIM from a GSM phone and it will only allow emergency calls.
Re:Old cell phones are kids toys (Score:1)
In Germany, emergency dialing was disabled for phones without SIM. Now you need a SIM, but it can be one without service and the phone can still use any network for an emergency call. Remove the SIM and the phone can not make calls anymore, not even to emergency numbers.
Re:Old cell phones are kids toys (Score:2)
Actually, GSM has a special emergency phone call mechanism that is different to normal voice calls when no SIM is present. The issue being that there is no subscriber information available so an alternative is needed to uniquely identify the caller such as using the phone's IMEI number. Other issue is that the SIM is used for authentication and contains cryptographic algorithms. Without a SIM, no phone number is needed, the phone will have a "Make emergency call button" and this uses the special GSM emergency phone call mechanism.
When a phone has service with a SIM card present, on a GSM network in Europe, USA and other countries, the emergency number is 112. This maps to national emergency numbers.
There was recent case in the UK were a hoaxer (teenage girl) removed her SIM card and make an emergency phone call. This made national news because the Police were concerned about the caller's safety. Eventually the Police caught the hoaxer.
Re:Old cell phones are kids toys (Score:5, Informative)
James Bond's Phone (Score:2)
Re:James Bond's Phone (Score:2)
My Sony CM Z100 is still one of my favorites. Everyone else was lugging around those flip-bricks with extended NiCd packs that barely lasted 8 hours on standby. My little phone slipped in a pocket and ran 24 hours on a charge.
Re:James Bond's Phone (Score:2)
I've got an old Startac somewhere, I think. It was quite a great phone in it's day. Sounded better than any phone today, long battery life and had a great belt clip that was actually useful. I think I have an old palm phone in my office drawer somewhere, too. That was a piece of crap.
Donated (Score:5, Interesting)
Mine are donated to charity. Battered women shelters hand them out as emergency E911 devices. You don't need an active account to use E911 on an old cellphone.
That and the vibrate function comes in handy.
Re:Donated (Score:1)
Drat! Too late now, but should have added that as an option to the poll.
timothy
Re:Donated (Score:2)
Drat! Too late now, but should have added that as an option to the poll.
You insensitive clod! You neglected to recognize the more knowledgeable of the Slashdot flock! For shame! ;-)
Re:Donated (Score:2)
Don't worry -
... You've got to pick a few when you do multiple choice. Those are the breaks.
:-)
Re:Donated (Score:1)
should have added that as an option to the poll.
The vibrate function?
Re:Donated (Score:3)
Re:Donated (Score:4, Interesting)
It is surprising how much they hold their value. Old blackberries, iphones, android phones typically go for $50 and up, even dumb phones sell. I like helping divert some of the river of waste back into productive use.
Did that and Verizon bullshit. (Score:1)
My wife and I did that with our Verizon cell phones.
When my wife called Verizon to cancel our service (we were a least a year out of contract), she said she wanted to shut the account down move her number and cancel my number - we did not want to move it. Verizon said that they'll move her number to the new service and "suspend" or something like that the other number. My wife thinking it was some sort of BS industry term didn't pursue it with the rep.
Next month a bill for $6 for a "suspended" number.
She called and told them that she wanted the number and account canceled and she was in no way paying that.
So, watch out with those customer "service" people. They bullshit you to get a little more revenue.
Those people make money hand over fist, have the texting gravy train, and make a shit load from locking people into the one sided contract; so why the bullshit?
We moved to a non-contract service and are much happier.
Re:Donated (Score:3)
You don't need an active account to use E911 on an old cellphone.
That and the vibrate function comes in handy.
Indeed. I keep one in the glove compartment of my pickup truck for exactly that purpose. I pull it out every once in a while and put it on the car charger to keep the battery nice and healthy.
Re:Donated (Score:3)
Mine are donated to charity. Battered women shelters hand them out as emergency E911 devices. You don't need an active account to use E911 on an old cellphone.
That and the vibrate function comes in handy.
Good for you for donating your old phones. (I think we all should.) But your charitable sentiment was tainted by your last sentence.
Re:Donated (Score:3)
But your charitable sentiment was tainted by your last sentence.
Must....resist.... vibrating...taint....jokes....
Re:Donated (Score:1)
Why? Because battered women lose all sexuality? Because he made a light-hearted joke about a horrible situation, to perhaps add levity to a grave scenario?
Fuck you and puritanism.
Re:Donated (Score:3)
Emergency use (Score:2)
Re:Emergency use (Score:2)
Agree about Sprint's rural coverage being sad. But, for 911 purposes, you aren't helping much. Sprint and Verizon are both CDMA. If you call 911 from a Sprint phone (even a deactivated Virgin Mobile), it will use whatever CDMA network it can find (i.e., typically Verizon or Bell Canada). If you wanted an extra backup 911 phone, I'd suggest a deactivated GSM flip-phone, which would cover the rare instance where the only network is AT&T/T-Mobile/Rogers.
Properly Recycled (Score:4, Insightful)
They get separated from their batteries. Batteries and devices get put in separate Tupperware bins, and every year or so the bins are taken to the local recycling center. After that I expect they wind up in the Far East where child labourers get poisoned as they disassemble them.
Re:Properly Recycled (Score:5, Informative)
You can recycle old cell phones with Apple. [apple.com] And that's *any* cell phone, not just iPhones. (It says so right there on the page: "All models and types of cell phones".) You can bring them to an Apple store or fill out the form on that page and they'll send you a free box with prepaid return shipping. They also have links to free recycling programs in 18 states and programs in other parts of the world. They promise "responsible" and "environmentally friendly" disposal.
You can also bring in an old iPod and you'll get 10% off a new one.
Click the link that says "Apple recycles responsibly" to see this:
When you recycle with Apple, your used equipment is disassembled, and key components that can be reused are removed. Glass and metal can be reprocessed for use in new products. A majority of the plastics can be pelletized into a raw secondary material. With materials reprocessing and component reuse, Apple often achieves a 90 percent recovery rate by weight of the original product.
Apple meets the requirements of the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal. All e-waste collected by Apple-controlled voluntary and regulatory programs worldwide is processed in the region in which it was collected. Our recyclers must comply with all health and safety laws, and we do not allow the use of prison labor. Apple recyclers do not dispose of hazardous electronic waste in solid-waste landfills or incinerators. For an example of the stringent processing and operational controls Apple places on its directly contracted recyclers, read an excerpt from our recycler requirements agreement [PDF].
Re:Properly Recycled (Score:2)
Re:Properly Recycled (Score:2)
Re:Properly Recycled (Score:2)
Yes, it's actually kind of astounding that no-one in the poll-editing crew seems to have considered that anyone might recycle the things. Talk about missing options...
Re:Properly Recycled (Score:2)
sell it. (Score:5, Insightful)
Old cellphones, in my household ... (Score:1)
Old cellphones? In my household?
It's more likely than you think.
Old iPhone (Score:4, Interesting)
All my phones from last 10 years are still around and being used, if I can help it.
Smartphones:
iPhone 4 is still very much alive and kicking, used essentially as an iPod/music device/game device/development/whatever. I also take it when I travel to use with foreign SIM cards, to avoid risking newer iPhone 5.
iPhone 3 was also alive until last summer, but unfortunately got stolen during a trip abroad. Sure hope someone is enjoying it. Curiously, thieves in Bangkok were considerate enough to take the phone but leave the wallet that was right next to it in my bag.
Dumb phones:
I had a few "prepaid" Virgin Mobile phones laying around, reactivated and used sporadically for visitors from abroad or as needed. Unfortunately, they had to be discarded ever since Virgin Mobile stopped selling short term prepaid plans (and they cannot be activated directly on Sprint network due to their policy). Too bad, they all worked just fine.
An old Sprint phone has been recently revived and reactivated through one of the non-contract Sprint resellers - give it to kids as a "safety' device.
An old quad-band GSM phone from ATT is a spare, taken abroad to use with local SIM cards sometimes (but lately iPhone does that better).
The only phone I parted with voluntarily in the last 10 years was a Samsung Galaxy (forget which revision). I tried hard to like Android (hoping to develop applications for it, wanted to get some system experience), could not like it though and sold it on eBay.
Ancient brick phone (Score:2)
My mom has an old Motorola brick that she got well over ten years ago for an emergency phone when she and my dad take road trips. The battery is not all that good any more, but she refuses to upgrade to, say, the Verizon pay-as-you-go my dad got for Xmas, lost, and found a couple years later after he was given another one. I think she likes the leather case it's kept in. The only reason why Verizon still supports this ancient brick is because it supports the digital protocol.
Re:Ancient brick phone (Score:2)
I never got service for it, but I did mod one of its brothers to be the uplink transmitter for my unlicensed radio station fifteen years ago.
Stick around as backup devices (Score:5, Insightful)
for when newer devices get damaged/broken/lost
Re:Stick around as backup devices (Score:2)
That's what I do as well. It beats paying for the insurance (which, if you banked, could use to buy a new phone anyways.)
Get recycled (Score:2)
Our local zoo collects old mobile phones to have them disassembled and recycled ethically and responsibly. So far I've handed in 4 or 5 handsets this way.
Some of my former workplaces collected old handsets for disposal, as well as batteries.
We generally hang onto the 'last' generation handset as a backup, and then dispose of it when we next replace the current handset.
Donate them to shelters (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Donate them to shelters (Score:3)
Women's shelters and animal shelters are where all of my charitable donations (items, money, time) go. Our motorcycle club has poker runs and such to raise money for Home of the Sparrow, a local shelter for women with children escaping (usually abusive) relationships.
Last poll? (Score:2)
Don't know if I'll be coming back after the boycott. Probably like most of us.
Re:Last poll? (Score:2)
Oh please, you'll be back(if you even actually leave) no matter what. Clearly this is just an excuse for you to get attention. I mean, you answered a poll telling everyone it might be your last one....just like a spoiled entitled 14 year old claiming they will quit Facebook.
recycling old cellphones (Score:1)
Melbourne Zoo makes money from recycling old cellphones or mobile phones as we know them in Australia.
Old cellphones get passed down to me (Score:3)
Old cellphones get passed down to me, you insensitive clod!
For many years I was using second hand phones. 2 year old devices out of contract are good enough for me.
That, an I only use unlocked GSM.
Re:Old cellphones get passed down to me (Score:2)
My first cell phone (c. 2004) was a hand-me-down of a hand-me-down. It got dumped in recycling when they shut down the cell tower network it relied on.
Second phone was bought new, but close to cheapest available at the time. (It could send and receive text messages!) It got accidentally left in an airport.
Third phone was similarly cheap and new and is my current phone. It has a colour display! And a camera!
I've just been handed-down an Android phone a few days ago but haven't had time to try it out yet.
I'm intending to keep the previous phone anyhow. My internet banking uses text messages for two factor authentication. It is handy to have something too dumb to run malware.
P.S. In /. beta, I couldn't see any comments to the poll. I'm allowing scripts from slashdot.org and fsdn.com.
Re:Old cellphones get passed down to me (Score:2)
Poll comments don't work yet on the beta site -- they're on the list of stuff that will be re-implemented. My apologies for the inconvenience.
I don't use cell phones (Score:1)
I don't have any old cell phones, because I don't use cell phones, and I don't want to use cell phones.
I am appalled at how cell phones have made people into zombies.
They walk the streets very slowly with eyes focused on their tiny screens, stopping in street corners, in narrow entryways, in pathways in the supermarket and sometimes suddenly in front of me. They are a nuisance.
I once saved one of these zombie-women from being run-over by a train when she while texting walked out into a railroad crossing just ahead of the falling booms ignoring the klaxons and the flashing light.
She could have died if I had not stepped in, but she just ignored that she had been in real mortal danger and continued texting.
Then there is the radiation. Science has still not concluded enough for me that cell phone radiation in the normal doses you get from a cell phone would not do me harm. On the contrary, there are more and more paper being published on the subject proving yet and yet again that cell phone radiation is harmful to brain cells of lab animals, although with much smaller heads than we have. Nerve cells get stressed and die. There are even a hypothesis that the radiation itself could cause addiction to it, although there is quite a bit of tissue in the human brain that would absorb that radiation before it would reach the centre of the brain where it would have an effect .. or is there?
No, I choose not to become a zombie. Thank you.
Re:I don't use cell phones (Score:2)
"I am appalled at how cell phones have made people into zombies."
That aren't.
"They walk the streets very slowly with eyes focused on their tiny screens,"
They? Who is 'they'? are you saying all phone owner, or some people?
A few people not paying attention means all cell phones make people Zombies?
And this begs the question who are you to determine they should behave like you claim? Maybe they are sick of you pushing past them like you own the damn walkway.
" Science has still not concluded enough for me that cell phone radiation in the normal doses you get from a cell phone would not do me harm."
Yes, yes they have. Well, not for you, but for rational science thinking people we have.
", there are more and more paper being published on the subject proving yet and yet again that cell phone radiation is harmful to brain cells of lab animals
no, no there isn't. How many studies have you read on this topic? DO you know how to apply Baysian Probability to the study? do you even know what qualifies a good study?
" Nerve cells get stressed and die"
not from cell phones.
" There are even a hypothesis that the radiation itself could cause addiction to it, "
no there isn't. HInt wild pull outof there ass idea is not a hypothesis
"of tissue in the human brain that would absorb that radiation before it would reach the center of the brain where it would have an effect "
Nothing in that sentence makes any sense. None of it. A complete lack of understanding the Brain, what radiation is. how cell phones work. None of it.
Dear jeebus, shut up about science until you learn something. Or at east learn logical fallacy and apply that knowledge to weed them out of your posts.
I used to have a fancy smartphone (Score:1)
Re:I used to have a fancy smartphone (Score:2)
I'm looking for a cheap slider for my Dad (which has to work on a particular network) to downgrade him back to a phone he actually liked.
You can still buy a few bar-phones, but they are garbage. And you can get flip-phones, which he hates. But for some reason there's no cheap prepaid sliders anymore.
Re:I used to have a fancy smartphone (Score:2)
Ummm, that's not a slider, that's a bar-phone with a keypad cover.
As for eBay, the problem is the majority of handsets are from the US market, with a different frequency band from the one I need.
Re:I used to have a fancy smartphone (Score:2)
Yeah, stupid people communicating with people who follow them. Clearly we should all sit in isolation and just stare at the nearest wall.
You should tell them all what the proper thing to talk about.
Mine Bitcoins . . . (Score:2)
. . . I should have one really soon now . . .
Re:Mine Bitcoins . . . (Score:1)
Missing Option (Score:1)
Obviously older handsets aren't worth as much / theoretically can be worthless if the parts are useless, but hey, I figure someone may as well be using the materials somehow - better than the phone just lying around useless at home.
Donate! (Score:1)
Sigh (Score:4, Insightful)
I want to be responsible environmentally, so I hold onto our old phones with the intent of recycling them.
In practice, though, what it's meant is we still have cell phones from the late 1990s in a box on the shelf.
Comment removed (Score:1)
Apple vs Android (Score:2)
A 2 year old iPhone can usually be sold for $200, which is the same price as a new, on contract, iPhone. I just sell the old one every two years on eBay and get a new "free" one. I'm on a plan at work, so my contract price for unlimited data and talk is $50/month, and I don't pay it anyway.
I think the high resale value is one of the two advantages of an iPhone over an Android phone.
The other advantage is being able to deal with Apple, rather than a carrier, when there's a hardware problem.
Nokia lasts forever. (Score:1)
Project parts (Score:4, Interesting)
Project parts. It's a nice source of little pieces which can be retasked to other uses. Displays, speakers, vibration module, battery, backlights if they don't get used, capacitive or resistive touch input, if it happens to be integrated with the screen module because it's new enough, little speakers, little microphones, wireless or cellular modules, if they're separate components, jacks and USB and other connectors. 802.11 and GSM antennas, Cases, if you want something that looks like a cell phone, but actually isn't.
One thing I've been more or less wanting to do is a fooseball table, where the little men are really old iPhones with pictures of little men on the screen who make grunting noises when they're the one to kick things, and make various faces, and scream in fear "whoaoaoaoaoa!" if you spin the bar instead of playing correctly, etc.. The only thing in the way at this point is the tig welding needed to attach the cases to the bars, and a couple more first generation iPhones.
Re:Project parts (Score:2)
You shall make for an interesting Bond villain, my friend.
Recycling... (Score:2)
Yup, given away here...
What I consider an old phone is generally still a useful device, leaving them sitting around deteriorating when not in use helps nobody and it's not really worth the hassle of selling them on and having potential idiots bring them back because they can't use them / dropped them in the bath / put them through the wash etc.
Donated to charity or recycled (Score:3)
Kids (Score:2)
brick phones (Score:2)
I am building a house of of bricked phones. so far I have 8 square feet of wall. I haven't mortared it yet.
Ashes to ashes (Score:2)
That isn't what I actually do. That is what I tell myself I'm going to do with it one day. In truth I'm guilty of #3 like most people.
Who let the offensive cockney in? (Score:3)
The first comment sounds like an offensive cockney: "Get tossed! I only replace my phone when it's broken, not whenever a new one comes out like some namby-pamby tosser!"
Fun (Score:2)
Motorola DynaTac (Score:2)
I have a classic car which dates back to the days of the Dynatac. I had one installed in a hands-free kit and just left it there when the analog network went dark.
Its still a conversation piece. I've seen people looking in the car and figured they were admiring it for its age and condition. Then they say, "Cool phone. Haven't seen one of those for years."
Donate (Score:2)
I sell my iPhones (Score:2)
After 2 years for about 1/3 of their original price.
And I can buy a new for almost half of the shop price(due to write off from my salary before taxes) so it is a good deal for me.
It would be way to expensive to buy otherwise and not really worth it.
in the USA (Score:2)
I sell my iphones for 1/3 cost after 2 yrs and buy a new one for 1/3 cost. Mostly breaking even due to forced subsides built into very high monthly contract costs. glad to see that changing here.
Recycled (Score:2)
Get matted and framed. (Score:2)
I have them nicely displayed on the wall of my office. My 1984 Motorola is my pride of my collection.
Donated... (Score:2)
Sell Em (Score:2)
Guests and travelling (Score:2)
I have a handful of 'old' phones sitting around. Most are 2G (or 2.5G at best) dumb phones. I leave them around for guests from overseas to use. I have family in America so for the most part, their 'home' phones are network locked. So when they arrive, they can buy a cheap pre-paid SIM and I lend them an old phone to use for a few weeks.
The newest 'old' phone I have sitting around is an iPhone 4 which I keep a travel SIM in for when I'm travelling overseas. My main/current phone is network unlocked of course, but it's easier to just take the 'travel phone' rather than fiddle around changing the SIM out. Since all my email/apps/music etc. sync through iTunes, there isn't really a downside to it ... all my stuff is on there just as on my main phone. Just with a different phone number. But I barely make calls and mostly use it for data/iMessage etc, so that doesn't matter.
sell on ebay (Score:2)
surprised to not see the "I sell them" option floating around, I usually get around $200 to $300 per phone.
Work great as WiFi cameras (Score:3)
Any old Android phones work GREAT as WiFi surveilance cameras. With the IP Webcam app [google.com] installed, not only can you connect with a browser and view the 640x480 streaming MJPEG video, but you can hit a button to get a full-resolution still anytime you want, and can turn the light/flash on/off as desired.
You can have some always-on computer (or DD-WRT WiFi router with connected USB hard drive) archiving this streaming video feed, OR you can utilize the built-in storage (perhaps a 32GB SDHC card) to do the DVR part right on the device, and have a 2-week archive constantly cycling around. You could even combine the two, and just periodically rsync the video archive, if your WiFi is patchy or similar. And your phone gives you two-way audio like an intercom, if desired.
While a WiFi camera isn't very expensive, your old phone can potentially do MORE, and is free. Plus the built-in battery means it'll keep going for several hours between power outages without buying a UPS. It doesn't even matter if your old phone's screen is shattered.
You could also glue one to your car's dash as an MP3 player, and (poor) offline navigation app with "OsmAnd~". It wouldn't hurt to have one hooked-up to your home stereo system, either, which you can wirelessly sync your music files to, and use as either an MP3 player or a white noise generator.
And you should be careful when giving away old phones for E911 use... Sprint has disconnected their iDEN network, and other 2G networks may soon be disappearing, or coverage areas changing. Without service, you won't realize you've got no network coverage, until you dial 911 in an emergency and find that you're out of luck.
Gaming platforms for my 10 year old (Score:2)
My 10 year old uses them to play games. When she's older she'll get her own phone, but for now our she gets our hand-me-downs (with no service).
Reused as light weight server (Score:2)
Smartphones get reused as webserver. After all a smartphone is a full featured computer with full networking so you can run most server daemons on it, httpd, dns, ftpd, sshd, bt-tracker, etc.