MyPrefixDial - Do you want to dial a phone number with Prefix? This software for Pocket PC 2003 Phone Edition device add a prefix to the phone number before dial.
What's New in This Release:
· Profile feature added. Country code added
PPC2003 PE - You know: new SMS message arrived and only a short sound is played. The screen is black. (To be precise: your device was turn on to play the sound, but the screen was turn off - turn off the video buffer completely - to save battery
CallBlock Free Edition (F5) (for Pocket PC) - CallBlock is a simple yet effective tool to block unsolicited incoming calls. Now you do not need to turn off your phone just to avoid unnecessary interruptions. Just leave it to CallBlock to filter your incoming calls and sms.
CallBlock also supports wildcard '*' pattern blocking
GPRS Keep Alive Do you have Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon, GPRS, GSM or some other type of wireless connection to the internet on your PDA? Have problems keeping it alive? Need to send repeated pings?
GPRS Keep Alive is your answer. Developed as a keep alive solution for your PDA and connection
HollerID Nametones - Put your Pocket PC phone to work so that when a contact calls you, your phone will literally announce the first name of the caller. An incoming call from a nametone-enhanced contact will no longer require that you grab the phone and read the display. Just listen for the nametone and decide 'do I or don't I?'
PhoneyCall - a fake call generator which allows you to simulate incoming phone calls to get out of sticky situations, drive your sale talks, or just fool your friends
VoiceDialer - Dial up to 9 numbers on your Siemens SX56 or T-Mobile Pocket PC Phone using unique voice phrases such as 'Samantha' and 'voice mail.' Trial version is limited to 3 numbers. All new proprietary recognition algorithm gives amazingly accurate voice recognition using very little memory! Version 2
Kai's Phone Spelling System .Net - Do you often need to spell words and phrases on the telephone? There are several standards. The most common is ''Englisch/Nato/ICAO''. If you want for example spell ''Hello'' , then you say: Hotel, Echo, Lima, Lima, Oscar