Sly Bald Guys Forum
Various Non-Bald Discussions => Autos,Toys and Hobbies => Topic started by: JDog on September 10, 2007, 06:18:43 AM
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This may seem like a silly question.
When you sign up to a cell phone provider(Verizon,Cingular,Tmobile etc) are you issued with a SIM card that you can put in any cell phone handset or do the handsets set and configure automatically with the specific Provider?
In Australia ,you are given a SIM card by your provider that is encoded with your phone number and ,as long as the handset isnt locked to a specific network, you can use any handset you want.
I know in Europe it is the same.
Any info or feedback would be appreciated.
Jesse
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For the record, I apologize for the topic title.What I meant to have it as was
North American Cell Phone Networks.
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This may seem like a silly question.
When you sign up to a cell phone provider(Verizon,Cingular,Tmobile etc) are you issued with a SIM card that you can put in any cell phone handset or do the handsets set and configure automatically with the specific Provider?
In Australia ,you are given a SIM card by your provider that is encoded with your phone number and ,as long as the handset isnt locked to a specific network, you can use any handset you want.
I know in Europe it is the same.
Any info or feedback would be appreciated.
Jesse
Well, the problem I have come up against is that a SIM chip for T-Mobile, is not the same size as a SIM chip for Verizon. So if you try and use a T-mobile chip in a phone configured for Verizon you will have a problem. Not sure about the other providers, but I assume you would have the same problem.
Hope that helps...
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Well, the problem I have come up against is that a SIM chip for T-Mobile, is not the same size as a SIM chip for Verizon. So if you try and use a T-mobile chip in a phone configured for Verizon you will have a problem. Not sure about the other providers, but I assume you would have the same problem.
Hope that helps...
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It does thanks X.
Very interesting too. Because all of Australias 5 main Cellular providers,the SIM card is the same size
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It does thanks X.
Very interesting too. Because all of Australias 5 main Cellular providers,the SIM card is the same size
Wish that were the case here in the US :'(
I had a free phone (Verizon configured) but my SIM chip is T-Mobile ... so I am stuck with my old beat up cell for now...
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I've always been with Cingular and the SIM card I've had has always been the same, even though I've used different makes of phones (Nokia & Samsung).
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I've always been with Cingular and the SIM card I've had has always been the same, even though I've used different makes of phones (Nokia & Samsung).
Oh yeah, you can use different makes (Nokia/Samsung), but Nokia will make a phone configured for Verizon and a phone configured for T-Mobile. The SIM chip slots will be different sizes depending on who they make it for. So Nokia will make the same phone for different providers (I am assuming) with different SIM slot configurations.
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Where's Albert on this one?
The problem is that all the phones here are locked. I think there's actually a lawsuit here in CA to break that up. But, if the phones were unlocked, they could use the same sim card, being that the phone took the same model of sim card.
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Where's Albert on this one?
The problem is that all the phones here are locked. I think there's actually a lawsuit here in CA to break that up. But, if the phones were unlocked, they could use the same sim card, being that the phone took the same model of sim card.
I think it's the same in Kansas and Missouri. I've never heard of being able to change but do know that phones won't transfer between carriers around here.
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if you buy an unlocked phone on ebay you can transfer your sim card... i did it and it works perfect... but then again i live in canada might make a difference? but i would think not...
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if you buy an unlocked phone on ebay you can transfer your sim card... i did it and it works perfect... but then again i live in canada might make a difference? but i would think not...
you can do that here in the US also.
Welcome to Sly Bald Guys!
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Thanks for the info everyone,this has helped me better understand the N.American cellular networking ability.