Yes. You need to call the business that allows you phone service, like Verizon, T-Mobile, and more. They will ask you for information about you cell phone, like the phone number, and personal information. Then they can tell you games you played, calls you made, and texts you made. My brother's money in his account finished quickly so we asked an AT&T database to trace and access what my brother was doing. We were able to find EVERY SINGLE text he made!
There are two methods to add a text file to a MS access Database.1) Link the text file. Go to File/Get External Data/ Link Tables. In the link file screen change the file type to Text file and then browse to the text file and select your text file. MS Access will prompt you to give the specs of the file when you are linking it. 2) Import the file to an access table. Go To File/Get external Data/ Import. In the screen change the file type at the bottom to text, and select your text file.
merry Christmas
The year was 1990's when the first text message was ever sent out.
The smallest unit of information you can access in a database is typically a single data element within a specific field of a record or a single cell in a table. It could be a single piece of data such as a number, text, date, or boolean value.
In a database, it is a string of text that is the same throughout the database.
Text.
Depends on the database programming language
Telnet offers no encryption, everything sent is in clear text including passwords.
The phone. i sent the first text massage.
database
Well, I dont think there is proof of that, because I am sure that the person who ever sent and recieved the first text message, deleted it... but there is a chance that the person who sent or recieved the message, or even created the method of instant text messaging, wrote it down in his observations or something. I hope this helped, and if it didn't... I'm sorry! :)
there are about 12356523025635485636 text messages sent every day