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I have a budd who kept his whole life on the BB his company issued him. It was his only phone and he really had everything on it - band stuff, photos, vms from his daughter when she learned to talk, huge address book, everything. He blew it off when he got let go and just ignored the company's demands that he return the phone. One day they wiped it clean remotely. He was pretty stunned, but he pretty much asked for it. When I knew my last job was ending, I copied everything from my BB and laptop to my personal devices well in advance.
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I have my work + personal phone, same as a lot of others. My ipod touch also comes along every day. It handles podcasts much better than my Nexus does, and has over double the storage capacity.
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Lots of reasons, but I think work related is most common.
My neighbor carries two: one from his employer (work) and one of his own (personal) My business partner carries two: One with a US number, and one with a Kuwait number, because those are our two main operation locations. One of our department chiefs carries two: One with a US number and one with a KSA number. He is the manager of our KSA base, but his family all live in the US. |
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I have two phones - iPhone 5S (personal) and a Nokia Windows phone (Work). They do offer a BYOD option, where I can use the Good app as a secure portal on my iPhone to connect to work for text, email, and phone.
While I would like to consolidate down to one phone (my personal phone with the Good app), at this point, they do not offer a reimbursement for using my personal phone's data, and from the company perspective, the licensing for the Good app is nearly the same an issuing the Nokia phone, so if they offer a reimbursement for using my personal phone, it would cost the company more. So until they figure out the finances, I am essentially stuck with two phones. And I prefer to keep personal and work stuff separated, so that's why I don't only use a work mobile phone... -Z |
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As I am no longer on call with my new job, I'm back to being a one-phone guy. |
My work has limited access to my phone, but it does have my work exchange account on it. I've been seriously thinking of getting a second phone and relegating one phone to be just work and the other to not having any work-related stuff on it at all. Problem is the two do bleed over, and my calendar is my calendar - I need to know when everything is happening so I can plan accordingly. I have removed any work accounts from my studio computer and iPad.
Problem with 2 phones though is that you sometimes have to carry two phone. Easy enough to forward calls I suppose - but 2/3 of the time I'm texting rather than calling people. |
My wife has two phones, a government Blackberry and her own iPhone: Never shall the twain meet. The restrictions the government puts on the personal use of electronic devices is prohibitive and she cannot do any official emails (or texting) on her iPhone. She can use her iPhone to discuss government related work.
I have four email addresses on my iphone...and keep all calendar inputs on the one calendar. I'm not smart enough for multiple calendars :D |
The one good thing is that I can keep the exchange account active but turn email on and off - so I still have my work calendar (along with personal calendar entries) but don't have anything coming to the inbox. Then I can switch it back on come Monday. I think that will be my solution as carrying multiple devices is just too much...
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I got 477 work-related emails over the break. I'm really glad it isn't my data plan being used for that.
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Even the big phone makers sell dual-SIM phones for that market. There's just not enough of you demanding it in the US... :) Or there are dual SIM kits where you cut down standard SIMs to nano or micro SIM size and use two. But there is additional funkiness around firmware/OS support. But good luck doing that with a closed-ecosystem phone like the Apple... Quote:
A DID is about $1 a month, most come with bundled minutes in that. Actual "pure" SIP (e.g. no DID, so no traversing POTS networks) calls are pretty much just data - e.g. WiFi/2G/3G/4G. Any Android phone after about 3.x has a SIP dialer built-in - but even the most recent 4.x builds like KitKat don't include STUN support. So they won't work properly when NAT'd (call connects, but no audio, usually). Easiest solution is CSIPsimple, a free Android app which has STUN. Oh yeh - and I can make/receive phone calls on free WiFi (e.g. airport) in another country before I pick up a local SIM too. The other issues folks are referencing (spyware/remote wipe, mixing business/proprietary/sensitive information and/or email/calendars) are harder to solve. But just actual phone calls? That's been sorted for a long time... :) |
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