TER General Board

Thomas Guides!
badger48 153 Reviews 111 reads
posted

I've had them in my vehicles ever since I first saw them, way back when!

Anyone run into this. You are driving in the car with your S Other with google maps running and it shows the address on a Motel you visited a few weeks ago ? I always delete my timeline for the day of a meeting . I have also tried running g maps only on my hobby phone for a meeting. Unfortunately the address still exists and shows up on regular phone.        

Problem solved.

 
Or, next time you want to input a motel address, put an address of some of neighboring block business etc but NOT the actual address. This still won't explain to your so what you were doing looking up that address but at least it won't be a motel or a known whorehouse.

...on your burner phone.  Maybe use your burner email address rather than your personal gmail account? Then don't let Google link them and never sign on to your personal account on your burner phone.  

 
Life is good

 
The Cat

I use a burner phone for ALL of my P4P activities. It appears you have some of the same connections on both of your phones.

I have a completely different email address and passwords on my burner phone.

I don't do P4P-related keyword or map searches on my personal cell phone.  

I have never even dialed the burner phone number from my personal cell phone nor dialed my personal cell phone number from my burner phone.  

No nexus has ever been created from one of my phones to the other.

Some guys have stated (quite adamantly, in fact) that a separate burner phone is a terrible option FOR THEM and would be ride with negatives FOR THEM, which I agree with and understand. I, however, prefer it.

I will never have the specific issue you've brought up here as long as I go with a burner and never hobby on my own cell.

As soon as I read your predicament, my first thought was do all of your dirt on the burner phone only.

...you could use paper maps.

Even better if you lived in L.A. County -- the time-tested fan favorite Thomas Bros. maps books are still published and the 2022 edition comes out soon!

Navigating your way to a new provider--or a civvy date or a meeting or a rendezvous with friends--was an adventure. Way more dangerous than looking at my phone's map feature.

Yep, go to page 43, B5, and then hope a pay phone would be nearby (and operational).

]quote]

Posted By: trex44
Re: Sort of fondly remember Thomas Guides
Yep, go to page 43, B5, and then hope a pay phone would be nearby (and operational).

You're really about memory lane there, trex! I remember back from the late 1970's and early 1980's of somehow making a mental note of where the best pay phones were located, which ones worked well, which ones had the best surroundings with the least noise interference from traffic, things like that. I learned that hospital lobbies, Denny's restaurants, bus terminals, places like that had the best phone booths with doors you could close for privacy and for quietness, and most often had seats so if it's a long conversation or several phone calls you're not on your feet the whole time.  

And writing this now, I also remember carrying 5 or 6 dimes (in the 1970's) with me all the time so I'd be ready in case I needed to make calls. By the mid 1980's, I was in the military and stationed far from my hometown, and it was the first time I began making long-distance calls, so a few dimes in my pockets became a roll of dimes and a couple rolls of quarters in my car all the time. Every payday (when I first joined, we were paid in cash, I'd go to the bank on base and get rolled coins.

Of course, this is about Thomas Brothers mapbooks too, and every few months I would buy the newest edition for the area I lived in, but I would usually keep the older ones, so I had a stack of them for a while. I had stuff marked in them or notes that I had scribbled, and I also kept them for nostalgia's sake. I think I stopped buying them sometime in the mid-1990's. I remember finding that stack of dog-earred and slightly moldy Thomas Brothers guidebooks in my garage right around 2005, I was purging everything I no longer needed, and they were the first to go.

Yeah, well...when you're a dinosaur...

The only reason the map books are still published by Thomas is that CA law REQUIRES a copy to be in every first-responder vehicle in the state.

E-maps are convenient but there are times when they're not reliable and a first responder who can't find their way to a call is not only going to impact someone's life -- it would probably lead to a lawsuit.

Backups are always a good thing!

I've had them in my vehicles ever since I first saw them, way back when!

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