Namaste Asteroid. All forum topics Previous Topic Next Topic. Accepted Solutions. BertnTX Constellation. This-is-me Comet. Open samsung members app. Look at bottom of page, select get help. Now go perform your procedure to get your complaint.
Soon as it malfunction, go to get help, send log with your concern. Sometimes when Android smartphones have too many messages saved on them they can get a little clogged up and have problems sending and receiving both regular text messages and multimedia messages.
If your messages have started to pile up on the device then go through the saved message threads and do some cleaning. Data and Information can add up over time so try and stay on top of your saved messages. Sometimes Android phones have problems and need to be wiped clean. Android makes it very easy and is very user friendly when backing up your information before doing the restore.
I recommend a periodic backup of your phone anyways. This should fix the phone right up and allow you to download and send picture messages again. You might even notice an increase in speed and functionality after performing a reset. It sets the phone to how it was when it came out of the box for the first time. Nice and clean. Remember that you can send a picture message to yourself to make sure that its working properly.
My sister got a new iphone4 yesterday and i have a samsung S4 she can't receive my pictures, she can't send them to me.. Rogers Community. Turn on suggestions. Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type. Showing results for. Search instead for. Did you mean:.
Go to solution. At any rate, enough things in Android have probably changed since I wrote this post that these steps don't even work today anyway. I came across this entry while trying to solve my own "how to MMS without a data plan". Finally solved it today! So "Enabling cellular data was the key"? KentheGeek Cellular data is tagged in different ways and the phone routes it out through Access Points based on how it is tagged. The special type "Default" will match anything that nothing else has matched.
However, if you change your Access Point so that it has only the "MMS" tag, then only data specifically tagged as being for MMS will go through the system. The cellular provider's network pays close attention to where data is going and bills it accordingly. If it is going to somewhere on the Internet that is not specifically recognized, then it gets billed against your data plan or blocked if you don't have one.
So, if you turn off cellular data entirely, both "Default" and "MMS" data stop working. If you turn on cellular data with the default settings, all types of cellular data are enabled, and you can get billed. But, if your phone allows you to change the access point type, you can make it so that when there is outbound data tagged "Default", it doesn't match that access point and has nowhere to go.
This prevents all general Internet access from working, across the board. Since it never leaves your phone, there is no possibility of being billed for it. There are three main things that a GPS receiver has to determine in order to work, independently for each satellite: 1 Can it see the satellite at all? The satellite is moving quickly, causing Doppler effects that increase or decrease the effective frequency by small but significant amounts, and, 3 How long is the signal taking to get from the satellite to the receiver?
Once the GPS receiver has this information for a certain minimum number of satellites, it can estimate your position, and the more satellites it has, the better the estimation. The problem is, scanning for this information from scratch can take up to 30 seconds per satellite. For mobile devices, this delay is unacceptable. So, they operate servers that store all that information and keep it up-to-date for each geographic area.
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