

Rather, once in CA with it listing CO time simply subtracting an hour when you hear the timestamp would let you know how long the message had been waiting for you.Ģ) Or if you were taking a Greyhound from CA back to AZ and didn't realize until after you were home that the phone was left in the seat pocket on the bus. Alternatively, having the Nebraska time stamped on the message wouldn't really help determine how long ago the message was left since the phone wouldn't have been able to notify you of a new message there, and you may have not been aware of your location at that time the message was left as it's hard to determine the time zone at that altitude when much looks the same from the sky. For example-ġ) If the timestamp was based on your physical location and you're on a 6 hour plane ride from NY to CA & someone leaves you a voicemail halfway into the flight over Nebraska and you listen to the message upon landing in CA timestamp would be 0:00 due to not being able to locate the phone while it was at 30,000 feet. If the timestamp was based on the phone location instead it could also cause much confusion when attempting to determine how long ago someone left you a voicemail. Or turn the auto playing of the time stamp off in your voicemail options if you don't want to hear it with each message.
Verizon system stamp tnt software#
It's literally a computer hard drive that stores the recording, it's software doesn't access or store your physical location or wait to be able to obtain the location to assign a time.ĭefinitely choose the number/carrier options you'd most prefer, but in many scenarios this setup is easier for determining exactly how long ago someone left you a voicemail, add 2 hours if in NY, subtract 1 if in CA.

Yes, the voicemail will only stamp the time for as soon as a message is left in your box based on the zone for your number in Colorado, regardless of where you are.
