Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am curious at what age is a cell phone justified?
I had one in 1999 when I turned 16, but it was obviously at that point for safety...call us when you get there type of thing. Texting wasn't really a thing yet, and this was a Nokia phone so it was long before smart phones.
Most of my friends still called the landline at my parents house, so I just have no idea what is normal for kids in today's world.
I didn't get one until I was 21, in 2001. I had an old school emergency car phone that lived in my car's glove box for emergencies. I think a flip phone is a good idea to start with. Kids don't need to be using smart phones unsupervised, IMO. They can search the internet on their smart phones and find anything, or snapchat with anyone. Just kick that can down the road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone try to start out with like a basic flip phone, essentially calls only and maybe slow texting? It is that not really an option any more?
We started with an apple watch with cellular. DS can reach us while out but less fully-functional than a full smart phone. He doesn't need the distraction temptation of a full smart phone.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone try to start out with like a basic flip phone, essentially calls only and maybe slow texting? It is that not really an option any more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like a 2010 question. Today My kids don’t use phones for phones. So what age do they get a device to
Communicate with friends, take pictures, listen to music, play games in the car on a long trip, that has a gps so I track them on the bus, and with the ability to call me (they usually text) if practice gets out early or they are “stranded” somewhere....
For us that was 6th grade for my son, and my Dd got a phone in 5th grade 2 years later. Also, We haven’t had a landline since 2012.
Don't brag about that. Every firefighter will tell you homes should have a landline. You'd be surprised at the number of people who know their home address but forget it in a fire. If you call 911 from a landline they can trace the call much faster than if you call from a cell phone.
We've had MagicJack since ~2012. We pay maybe $20 per year plus a 911 fee. It is VOIP, but the base is plugged into the router, and we have satellite phones throughout our house. Very cheap and reliable.
That's cool. But do I have to unplug my dial-up modem to make it work?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like a 2010 question. Today My kids don’t use phones for phones. So what age do they get a device to
Communicate with friends, take pictures, listen to music, play games in the car on a long trip, that has a gps so I track them on the bus, and with the ability to call me (they usually text) if practice gets out early or they are “stranded” somewhere....
For us that was 6th grade for my son, and my Dd got a phone in 5th grade 2 years later. Also, We haven’t had a landline since 2012.
Don't brag about that. Every firefighter will tell you homes should have a landline. You'd be surprised at the number of people who know their home address but forget it in a fire. If you call 911 from a landline they can trace the call much faster than if you call from a cell phone.
We've had MagicJack since ~2012. We pay maybe $20 per year plus a 911 fee. It is VOIP, but the base is plugged into the router, and we have satellite phones throughout our house. Very cheap and reliable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like a 2010 question. Today My kids don’t use phones for phones. So what age do they get a device to
Communicate with friends, take pictures, listen to music, play games in the car on a long trip, that has a gps so I track them on the bus, and with the ability to call me (they usually text) if practice gets out early or they are “stranded” somewhere....
For us that was 6th grade for my son, and my Dd got a phone in 5th grade 2 years later. Also, We haven’t had a landline since 2012.
Don't brag about that. Every firefighter will tell you homes should have a landline. You'd be surprised at the number of people who know their home address but forget it in a fire. If you call 911 from a landline they can trace the call much faster than if you call from a cell phone.
We've had MagicJack since ~2012. We pay maybe $20 per year plus a 911 fee. It is VOIP, but the base is plugged into the router, and we have satellite phones throughout our house. Very cheap and reliable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like a 2010 question. Today My kids don’t use phones for phones. So what age do they get a device to
Communicate with friends, take pictures, listen to music, play games in the car on a long trip, that has a gps so I track them on the bus, and with the ability to call me (they usually text) if practice gets out early or they are “stranded” somewhere....
For us that was 6th grade for my son, and my Dd got a phone in 5th grade 2 years later. Also, We haven’t had a landline since 2012.
Don't brag about that. Every firefighter will tell you homes should have a landline. You'd be surprised at the number of people who know their home address but forget it in a fire. If you call 911 from a landline they can trace the call much faster than if you call from a cell phone.