海角大神

Five ways to teach your old phone new tricks

New services that can make your cellphone 鈥榮mart.鈥

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Rich Clabaugh/Staff
These five services will make any old phone act like a "smart phone."

This summer was a big season for smart-phone lovers. Apple unveiled a new iPhone with built-in video camera, compass, and online movie rental store. Palm released a worthy rival, the Pre, which lets busy multitaskers flip between e-mail, spreadsheets, and, of course, phone calls. And several touch-screen and next-gen smart phones are on the way.

That鈥檚 great news for gadget geeks ready to spend $90 a month (or more) on their cellphones. But what about the rest of us? Even simple mobile phones are capable of a lot these days, thanks to text messaging and a slew of services designed for the average phone. Here are a few tricks to get your plain ol鈥 cellphone acting like a smart phone.

Google on the go: A lot of smart phones now come with an Internet browser, but you don鈥檛 need one to get a little guidance from Google. The search giant offers a surprisingly simple way to get quick answers through text messages. This free service works as a mobile dictionary, phone book, stock ticker, meteorologist, and currency converter.

If you鈥檙e in the mood for a movie, text message the title of the film and a ZIP Code to the number 466-453 (google). In a few seconds, you鈥檒l receive a reply listing show times, addresses, and phone numbers for several nearby theaters. For example, text 鈥淒istrict 9 02215鈥 for showings in Boston.

Each of Google鈥檚 22 text-search categories has its own syntax, but they鈥檙e pretty easy to remember. (The code words will be in italics.) For dictionary definitions, try 鈥define laconic.鈥 With directions, try 鈥渟acramento, ca to 94111.鈥 Unit conversions, use 鈥12 pounds in kilos.鈥 And Google can crack foreign words and phrases if you send it 鈥translate gato to English鈥 鈥 it will figure out what language you started with.

For the entire list of commands, is listed .

A competing service, ChaCha, specializes in answering bigger questions. Text it anything you want 鈥 even subjective questions 鈥 and its team of human researchers will whip up a reply. Of course, sometimes their response is 鈥渨e don鈥檛 know.鈥 Try out this ad-supported service by texting your query to 242-242 (chacha).

Read your voice mail: Busy days often lead to a pileup of voice mail. But when you finally hear 鈥測ou have seven new messages,鈥 it鈥檚 hard to tell which will be long-winded fluff and which are actual emergencies.

iPhones help out their owners through 鈥渧isual voice mail,鈥 which lets users see who left a message and choose to listen or to ignore them in any order. Several companies do the same thing for normal cellphones. Basically, the services intercept your messages and post them on a secure website. Log on, listen to whichever seem most pressing, and leave the rest for later.

Also, since most people can read faster than they listen, many of these services go the extra step of transcribing your messages. Then, like a personal secretary, they will e-mail or text you each voice message so that you can read them during a meeting, search and sort them, and never worry about jotting down important information while you listen.

Each company delivers a slightly different package. offers inexpensive plans starting at $0. touts very accurate transcription software, but its plans range from $10 to $30 a month. 鈥檚 system also transcribes the other way, letting you dictate text messages, memos, even Twitter posts out loud.

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