Joy <Mycroft_B@yahoo.com> wrote in
news

p.t2ofk1l9ug52hc@user-47b243c432.myhome.westell.com:
> Only when the phone is set to ring and announce (speak the name
of the
> caller in the contact list (like verbal caller id)) does the
headset
> power off. This is obviously a bug in the headset and explains
why it
> happened on two of my three phones. The third was set to ring
only.
> Who would have thought to check THAT setting???
>
> I will be contacting Motorola to see if they would be willing
to swap
> me for a headset that doesn't have this problem.
>
Thanks for the info, Joy. Motorola is quite easy to deal with.
I'm using the finest headset I ever owned, and I've owned
hundreds, the MotorROKR S9 stereo bluetooth headset. Radio Shack
finally figured out they don't sell a stereo-capable BT phone so
are dumping them for $79.95, cheaper than the net! I bought one
and it is really great. It makes NO MECHANICAL NOISE,
WHATSOEVER, when you move your head around, one of my pet peeves
with all my headsets. It seals nicely to reduce outside noise
and its "soft" plastic is easy on the head/ears when wearing it.
Of course, it has all the controls for the phone's MP3 player and
telephone functions, interrupting the music for the call then
putting the music back on with my MotoROKR V6M handset. My only
beef is there is a 2400 Mhz "dead spot" if the phone is in my
shirt pocket and I'm listening to the headset. The music balks
in one tiny location. Needs more Bluetooth transmitter power, at
the expense of battery runtime, of course. If the phone is on my
belt, the deadspot is gone.
Good luck!
Larry
--
Isn't it ironic that the same ISPs that are telling you
you're downloads threaten their networks......
.....are testing 100Gbps TV to sell on the SAME systems?
http://tinyurl.com/27qx3v