[Q] Voicemail App - Answer call and record voicemail on phone (not external service) - Nexus S Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Hi All,
Loving my Nexus S so far, but I am struggling to replicate one piece of functionality that I had on my old Nokia N95.
I can't find a voicemail app that will answer calls and record voicemail on the phone itself.
There are options for using an external service (my service provider, Google Voice, Youmail, HulloMail) but I am looking for something that will work in multiple countries and with multiple SIM cards when I travel and won't end up with me having fragmented voicemails and / or voicemail charges, that can record and manage voicemails on the actual phone itself.
I had this with the Nokia N95 using Advanced Call Manager (v2.78) from MelonMobile.
However, their Android version (1.02) doesn't, yet at least, offer this functionality.
Any suggestions on an alternative?
Thanks,
Alan.

Related

Visual Voicemail on Fuze - Works Well (free)

http://www.fusionvoicemailplus.com/
http://www.phonefusion.com/
http://mobilitytoday.com/news/009092/fusion_voicemail_g1
I've got the Fuze and was interested in Visual Voicemail. I've used Youmail and get the sms and email, but I saw this post about visual voicemail on the G1. I looked and they also support windows mobile 5 and 6.
The 2nd link is the company's main page and looks like they offer pay services as well, but the free visual voicemail works as far as I have been able to tell in testing it. It has a separate .cab to install and then change the settings in your fuze for forwarding and the voicemails come up in the program in a list and can be played as mp3.
Only issue I have on this is that they play over the speaker. Plug in headphones and you get privacy, but when I'm on a plane or in an airport I'd rather just hit play and listen on the earpiece on the headset for privacy. If anyone has any suggestions on playing mp3's through media player over the built in headset I'd be interested in the suggestion. Otherwise, this does everything I've seen on the iphone.
You may want to install on your storage card, then your vmails are stored there as well so as to not take up internal storage.
damn doesn't work with rogers in canada, won't accept changes to the no answer call forwarding
cparkhorn said:
http://www.fusionvoicemailplus.com/
http://www.phonefusion.com/
http://mobilitytoday.com/news/009092/fusion_voicemail_g1
I've got the Fuze and was interested in Visual Voicemail. I've used Youmail and get the sms and email, but I saw this post about visual voicemail on the G1. I looked and they also support windows mobile 5 and 6.
The 2nd link is the company's main page and looks like they offer pay services as well, but the free visual voicemail works as far as I have been able to tell in testing it. It has a separate .cab to install and then change the settings in your fuze for forwarding and the voicemails come up in the program in a list and can be played as mp3.
Only issue I have on this is that they play over the speaker. Plug in headphones and you get privacy, but when I'm on a plane or in an airport I'd rather just hit play and listen on the earpiece on the headset for privacy. If anyone has any suggestions on playing mp3's through media player over the built in headset I'd be interested in the suggestion. Otherwise, this does everything I've seen on the iphone.
You may want to install on your storage card, then your vmails are stored there as well so as to not take up internal storage.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm using YouMail right now, how does it compare to that? One feature I like about YouMail is that it will tell me the city, carrier and even the name of the person and/or business that called if available.
information
calirr,
on the app the comes up when you get a new vm, it has the date, time and how many seconds the message is, the caller id number and the number it was forwarded from (assuming this is so that you can identify if it was forwarded from cell or office or other?
You don't see the txt that comes in, this is the only information you get, so if carrier and city matter it may not be good for you. I travel and it's great to turn on the phone between flights and my vmails download, then when I'm on my next flight I can listen to them when I want.
So the free services you listed aren't actually visual voicemail, but simply mp3 conversion services?
tried this a while back with sprint. turns out they charge 20 cents a minute for forwarded calls.
With AT&T, it just deducts from your minutes.
plus yall get roll over minutes don't you? How much are you spending per month?
Check the information
1. not sure your definition of visual voicemail. If you're thinking transcribe to text, no it does not do this, and I don't want that because I haven't found a service that works well, and having an announcement telling someone calling me to speak clearly doesn't help.
This service puts your voicemail into an mp3, but it doesn't email it, there is a single app that comes up and they are listed in order with information and if you click it you can listen without being connected to the network. If that isn't visual voicemail then I completely didn't understand what the iphone is doing, because it looks like the same to me and that is called visual voicemail. (by the way, I only listed one service that I found, there are different sites with information about the free service and application, they just introduced an Android version as well)
2. I saw in the directions there is some more specific instructions on Sprint. If you forward a certain way there is a .20 charge, but if you follow their directions correctly there isn't this charge.
3. It looks like this service sends a txt msg to get information to the program, so you need txting and if you're limited this may not be good for you.
4. The time your caller is leaving a message it looks like it does go against your minutes.
Rogers CDMA?
y2whisper said:
damn doesn't work with rogers in canada, won't accept changes to the no answer call forwarding
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Below in the FAQ is a question on Sprint, which is CDMA. It's saying you have to contact the CDMA carrier to have them change it on the network, and I beleive Rogers is still CDMA as well. May be worth a call to tech support and ask if you want an app like this, for me it's worth it. The 813 number is in Florida, and that's where your calls will be forwarded to, so make sure you can call there cheap.
When you call up Sprint, the first thing to do is ask for Tech Support right away. They are the only ones who can set up the correct forwarding - Customer Service can’t. Ask the Tech Support representative to change the "Call Forward/Busy" and "Call Forward/No Answer" fields (NOT Unconditional Call Forwarding) to the Fusion Voicemail Plus number - 813-200-0200. The Tech Support representative will authorize and activate the feature. There is no additional charge for this service, unlike regular unconditional call forwarding which charges $0.20 per usage.
no rogers is GSM
has anyone had a problem where when you install it never goes through setup. I had to resend the test message to myself and even then I just got that voicemail no others.

anyone using google voicemail with verizon?

taking a serious look at gmail apps for my business. does anyone have any practical use and knowledge of google voicemail? please share.
thanks
mark
User Google voice, forward your number to your gv number, and then get your voicemails transcribed. It's pretty fool proof
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What I know is not much..but here goes.
I personally use google voice for my voicemail and have for over a year.
@work I am an operations manager in a drycleaners and we use a custom gmail address.
Both of these have never broke or failed. In other words it works better and is very dependable. More dependable than the software that runs our operation.
Not sure if this will help or not
I too, use google voice, and while the transcriptions usually aren't the best, it is really convenient to have all of your voicemails stored online and then you can play them all back. In terms of on a smartphone, you'll need a data connection, not only a cell connection to listen to voicemails
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Google Voice is like having a firewall in front of your real number. There are many benefits but I'll focus on the ability to block persistent telemarketers. You can block a number so it goes straight to voicemail or play the "this number is no longer in service". It also does free texting so you can forego the texting plan and save money.
I personally like it for the free visual voicemail and transcribing options, plus an email alert when I do receive a voicemail.
Also, cheap international rates compared to Verizon Wireless.
I use it for my voicemail (though still haven't switched to it for my actual number that people call). Works great!
I've been using Google Voice since Google first opened the service after purchasing GrandCentral.
My GV number is my business cell number. I also have my vzw # fwd to it for voicemail. The transcription and other features of this product make it a must have
i have been using google voice for my voicemail since it came out. the transcription of the messages is extremely convenient.
I tried it and hated it, I now us youmail, no issues so far. A lot of people to use and love Gvoice though, try it see if you like it.
I've never had an issue, and I have been using it for 6-8 months now. Works great for free visual vmail. It transcribes the message, but you can never read them. so that part is about useless. It is nice being able to delete a message without having to listen to it, and it's also nice being able to not have to dial into VM. But those are just personal preferences.
I love Google voice, I use it for my business and personal call needs all with one number. I put customers in there own contact group and assign them their own Voice mail message. Same goes for friends, family, telemarketers, etc. You can even have calls forwarded from an office phone to your cell to a home phone before it goes to voice mail. It's awesome I highly recommend it.
We use GV for several purposes, but I could see many more potentials for small businesses and startups. The company that I work for has 80 employees and provide technical services and support to government clients. I have one of my GV numbers programmed into my PBX at the office to route after hours tech support calls to blast the cell phones of on call technicians. When somebody calls in and dials "9" (for after hours tech support), it immediately rings all of the phones on the list for the on call techs. If they don't pick up, it plays a recorded message about after hours tech support, to leave a message, and a technician will be paged and will call back.
The transcript of the message is then sent out via text and email to the 3 techs and supervisors to ensure that somebody calls our clients back. It has been a great (and free service).
For somebody starting a new business, a GV number gives you a layer of separation between your hardware and your incoming calls. If, when starting up, you only have your private cell phone and don't want to give that number out, you can forward your GV number to your cell. If you change cell phone numbers or providers, none of your friends or business contacts have to change their number for you, you just change the call forwarding settings on GV.
As your business grows and you add phones, you can forward incoming calls to your cell AND/OR your office number. If your office changes locations, you can move and change the call forwarding info in GV so your number remains the same.
Our business moved a few years ago and have to pay our local Telco to forward our old DID from our old location to the new one. Due to some message up small Telco laws, we can't even port the numbers to a VoIP account. If we originally had set up a GV account for our office, we would be paying much less.
Great service, free, and the transcriptions, while not perfect, can often give you at least some of the info about the message. All in all, I highly recommend it!
Seth
I've used it and it works great!
I tried to use it but it said it doesnt support verizon. Is there a way around this?
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I have used it since it was in beta and I love it transcripts can be a little off but you can play it back. But for a free service it definitely beats vm and you can arcive your messages to. I like it my wife hates it . Just give it a run and see.
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I echo many of the comments above. Keep in mind that you can get the Google Voice for visual and transcribed voice mail without having to sign up for your own Google Voice phone number. You can also sign up for your own Google Voice phone number and keep your existing mobile number. The entire system is very flexible and the integration of phone services into your computer via your Google voice account on the web is pretty fantastic.
I had to fiddle with it to get it to work. Had to manually forward phone to gv number then set my voicemailmservice to google. Like a couple of people mentioned using the installation wizard willnfail with a message that it does not support it.
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google voice
google voice is awesome and its free..transcribe barely ever woorks rite.. but other than that its flawless.
I use GV for my primary line voicemail..
as others have said, transcription is almost useless, I like the ability to listen without having to sit through automated prompts.

[Q] Full Google Voice Features on Motorola Atrix on AT&T using Wireless Number

Phone: Motorola Atrix 4g
Carrier: AT&T
OS: Android 2.2 (soon to be 2.3!)
Problem: Can't use all Google Voice Features with Cell Number
I recently purchased the Motorola Atrix and so far I am very impressed with this phone. My friend has an Android phone with Sprint and he told me about Google Voice and how great it was for his phone. I short I WANT that with my phone. I understand the basic concept of how GV works and how Sprint has a "special" relationship with this service, but I still would like to try and make it work with my phone in a similar way.
Notes:
I do not have a separate GV Number.
I have installed the GV app and the voicemail functions work but SMS and call forwarding do not work.
My Questions:
1) If I port my cell number over to GV will everything work correctly (like Sprint...including SMS and Call Forwarding features)
2) If I do port my number over...how are my outgoing and incoming calls (that go to my cell phone) billed on ATT. Because calls get routed through Google do they still appear as Mobile to Mobile Calls? Are they all Land line calls from GV? Does the forwarding of the correct "Caller ID" information solve all of these problems?
3) Ideally I would like to avoid porting my number to Google, and work with settings on my phone or with ATT technicians to make my phone work like it would on the Sprint System. Basically I want to use all of the GV benefits without getting a separate GV number and without porting my Cell number to GV. Is this Possible? Has anyone done it?
Thanks to anyone who read this and has any information for me.
Cheers,
BW

How to get rid of my second phone...

I have my personal phone, Samsung Focus, and my work phone, iPhone 3GS, and I'd honestly like to only have to carry 1 with me, the Focus.
What I need:
Receive phone calls [Done]
Receive text messages
Receive Email [Done]
How can I have my iPhone forward text messages? Or is there a service similar to AT&T Messages I can use on my Focus to get my text messages on my iPhone?
well than try to change the number from the iphone to the focus and call it a day. I am not aware of any service that you are talking about than can forward messages from one phone to another.
I think that I might do is put the iPhone SIM Card into an old Android phone and use an SMS Relay app to forward the text messages.
You could check for a GSM shortcode that will handle SMS forwarding. I know there's one for call forwardign (you're probably already using it).
Alternatively, even if there's not an app for SMS forwarding in Apple's store, you may be able to find one on Cydia (requires jailbreaking though, which might not be OK on a "work phone").
Can you use google voice and install something like govoice on your samsung?
Just a thought.
Work provided me with an iPhone 4S and pays the bill. So, I ported my personal number for my LG Quantum to Google Voice. It made it so that I did not need to tell anyone a new number.
The official Google Voice app is not as good as some of the pay ones. I now use GV Mobile+. Also Talkatone is a google voice app that lets you talk using wifi (if connected such as at home) or data.
GV Mobile+ also supports sending pictures in text messages, unlike the official Google Voice app.
In any case, you will want to port you personal number to Google Voice.
After that, you can also take the SIM out of the iPhone and put it in a different phone. In my case, I cannot, since the iPhone 4S uses a Micro SIM, so I would need a Micro SIM to SIM adaptor.
There are Google Voice apps for Windows Phone as well.
Either way you go, the first step is porting your personal number to Google Voice.
Other advantages:
Can configure it to ring your work cell, office phone, and home phone all at the same time.
Can switch the conversation to any number you have configured by pressing * during the call.
Can easily record the conversation if you desire.
Text messages that are sent and recieved over data, so work will not notice or care.
< delete >
Perhaps google voice could help or some auto SMS forwarding app on your 2nd phone

Question Inferior phone and voicemail apps (Google Fi)

My question is how can I get a feature-rich phone/voicemail app for my new Samsung? My new flip was bought through Google Fi and the phone dialer and voicemail apps are vastly inferior to the app on my previous two phones also from Fi where these functions were integrated into one app. The old app or one very similar is in the play store as "Phone by Google" but when installed on the Flip the voicemail features are disabled and the option to turn them on in settings is greyed out. I interpret this to mean that Samsung has placed some kind of lock on this feature. Right now I can get transcription but it requires an awkward workaround that sends the voicemail to the text messaging app.
I would be happy if I could either get the Google app to work or another app with similar capabilities. When I speak of capabilities I would include transcription of voicemails and the ability to take actions on a phone number from the voicemail without having to memorize the number, navigate to the separate phone app, manually find the number, and finally take whatever actions such as blocking the number. As it stands I can't get the Google app to work and I do not see any viable alternatives in the play store and even if there were alternatives I would probably have the same problem with the voicemail blocked.
Cubeology said:
My question is how can I get a feature-rich phone/voicemail app for my new Samsung? My new flip was bought through Google Fi and the phone dialer and voicemail apps are vastly inferior to the app on my previous two phones also from Fi where these functions were integrated into one app. The old app or one very similar is in the play store as "Phone by Google" but when installed on the Flip the voicemail features are disabled and the option to turn them on in settings is greyed out. I interpret this to mean that Samsung has placed some kind of lock on this feature. Right now I can get transcription but it requires an awkward workaround that sends the voicemail to the text messaging app.
I would be happy if I could either get the Google app to work or another app with similar capabilities. When I speak of capabilities I would include transcription of voicemails and the ability to take actions on a phone number from the voicemail without having to memorize the number, navigate to the separate phone app, manually find the number, and finally take whatever actions such as blocking the number. As it stands I can't get the Google app to work and I do not see any viable alternatives in the play store and even if there were alternatives I would probably have the same problem with the voicemail blocked.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I agree that the Samsung dialer is inferior to the google dialer. I switched to the google dialer but the back screen doesn't work properly with calls. I switched back to the Samsung dialer which seems 10 years old.
I use Google phone dialer, haven't noticed any issues. When I was with Verizon, messages showed up fine as VM, but no transcription as wasn't supported on the plan I had. Switched to Tmobile, VM stopped working, they made me download their VM app, so I'm guessing service you are on dictates which app and how VM works. Because of this I've gone back to forwarding all VM to Google Voice and now get my transcripts and ability to archive VM, as well as forward and many other svs. Only negative I've had is if I call back the caller from GV, it uses their number, not the carrier number. Most of the time the caller leaves a different number to call back anyway, so I have to copy past from the transcription. So, if I can one click to call back, I just go back to the dialer, look for missed call, and call them back from there if the call back number js the same. I keep GV set on do not disturb so I'm never bothered with calls to that number, and still use GV to make all calls to people I don't want to have my cell, and when they call me it goes to VM automatically. Google Phone Dialer has also done an excellent job keeping spam from reaching me, I can't use the Google call intercept to verify caller, Pixel feature only, but the spam blocker seems to still work great.

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