It monitored various emergency and other radio channels used by police, fire department, ambulance service, taxis and so on. The '10 channels' is in reference to how many tuned channels the thing can scan.
Here is some more detail for that particular scanner:
Waiting for someone to explain that iPhone has replaced this too (via streaming), completely unaware that the origin of the stream is likely a 3.5mm jack on... an actual scanner.
While very true, so long as someone keeps that scanner online and the source remains unencrypted, only one person needs to own a scanner rather than hundreds.
Sadly, my city now encrypts all police channels. Fire and EMS can still be streamed though.
I am surprised they such sensitive channels are not encrypted. Both for confidentiality and integrity.
It depends on the region and specific needs, but a common reason for not encrypting is that it adds complexity in an emergency (where, e.g., people might need to communicate from other regions nearby, or ambulance needs to talk to fire, maybe civil defence or AREC needs to be involved.) The simplicity of plain unencrypted radio can outweigh the benefits of secrecy.
This said, different places weigh factors differently, there's no one-size-fits-all answer.
But then you lose accountability.
In what sense?
Likely replaced by group text for most. my grandpa drove snowplow for the state and often had the scanner listening for when he might be called in. he couldn't respond directly but he did call dispatch to give his ability to come in. Pagers probably replaced that for many.
It might be possible to use iPhone as scanner with RTL-SDR dongle. I don't know if there is any scanner software for the iPhone, most of it is PC software.
Anything is possible with accesories but that breaks the thesis.
For the moment, yes. But in practice, this years dongles are next years built-ins. The same was the case with GPS, accelerometers, temp and humidity sensors, blood oxygen sensors, incident light detection, finger print reading, cameras and so on. Phones absorb sensors like toddlers consume cookies, they can't get enough of them.
I’d like to have a thermometer in my iPhone, for ambient temp, but most of all I am waiting for IR photography and the the inevitable calibrated fever thermometer app.
The promo image for the next Apple event looks kinda like IR false colour to me, so maybe you’ll get your wish?
I'll bet $20 you can find a combination thermometer cellphone on aliexpress.
Oh, I found one already!
I don’t want an Aliexpress phone, though.
I have this absurd vision of someone sticking their smartphone edge-on into a slab of beef as a meat thermometer.
I wish that Apple would match all these sensor features on their laptops as well.
I want to those things. Tricorder please.
It will happen. The bigger obstacle is to make sensors cheaper. But MEMS has opened many doors already and I think microfluidics and various gas sensors (think chromatograph in your pocket) will be the next frontier.
SDR++ app enables this on Android
Ah, I remember those now! I forgot they were called scanners. Thanks!
I used to sell that particular model (I worked for Tandy on Saturdays in Amsterdam when I was a kid).