Google Play has
Network Cell Info & WiFi (Android Digital Download) for
Free when you click on the '
Install' button.
Thanks to Community Member
midjuneau for finding this deal
-
Note, must be logged into your Google Play account to install app
About the Product- Network Cell Info is an extensive mobile network and Wi-Fi monitoring app with measurement and diagnostic tools (5G, LTE+, LTE, CDMA, WCDMA, GSM). Network Cell Info can help troubleshoot your reception and connectivity problems while keeping you in the know about your local cell carrier radio frequency landscape.
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Location and device or other IDs."
Seems like a no name app developer, ymmv on what your privacy is worth. these type of apps inherently need location access, so you do give them a lot
I did find this two-minute, 42-second video (with the founder or CEO) interesting:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBVJHeW
(esp. the part about the company needing to appear bigger than they actually are)
As well as this (much longer) podcast episode (which I was only the third or fourth viewer on, lol), which talks about how to use apps for cross-promotion of other apps:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FPPghH4
At the 01:12 mark, the host states:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F...pc#
"And every two weeks we bring you tips and advice from marketers at major consumer brands who share how they achieve their retention and engagement goals."
I've only listened to the first ~15 minutes thus far, but they have the Director of Marketing of M2Catalyst on this episode of the podcast.
He compares it to Waze, and I would also compare it to Speedtest.net (but for both mobile/cellular as well as WiFi)... he may have just not wanted to mention the competition.
I don't know that I'd have just a whole lot of use for it in the city, but it might be better if I was still in a rural area.
At ~8:30, the host asks about the monetization model for the app, but the Marketing guy seems to tiptoe around it a bit before answering.
He makes it sound like the only monetization comes from ads (in the Lite version) and app sales (from the Pro version).
That might be true, but it's hard for me to believe they don't monetize the back end (esp. the data) in any way.
But anyway, that's beyond the scope of usage.
What I'd like to see is for M2Catalyst to have a User Guide to show real-world scenarios of how a user would use+implement this app in their everyday lives, and maybe even an in-depth review by a neutral third party.
They do get mentioned in this short (just under two minutes) video:
Top 3 Apps For Finding Cell Towers
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKc_yVT
OpenSignal (mentioned in the above video) seems really cool/useful, but maybe this app is better for people with a networking/comms background.
Edit: I found these helpful resources:
https://www.m2catalyst.
https://www.m2catalyst.
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Location and device or other IDs."
Seems like a no name app developer, ymmv on what your privacy is worth. these type of apps inherently need location access, so you do give them a lot
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it literally has a 30 seconds video to explain : https://youtu.be/wfK-nsROelw
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There's a Pro subscription on top of this "paid" app...
So your phone doesn't automatically find the best cell tower?
What does the Pro version get you?
No, Apple does not provide APIs for developers to make these kinds of apps.