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#1
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radioguy wrote:
I have a GSM cell phone. Despite what people in other contries say about just switching sin cards when you go to another country, that does not work. Actually it works fine. The problem that you are having is because you are trying to put a foreign SIM in a phone that was sold to you at a discount by a cellular service provider. In order to prevent you from taking their phone and selling it on eBay, they lock it to SIMs provided by them. If you were to buy an unlocked phone, or have your service provider (SP) remove the SP lock, then it would would fine. People who travel know this and either buy an unlocked US GSM phone (850/1900mHz), or buy a multiband phone that includes the US bands. If you have a EU only (900/1800) phone, you can often rent a US one for little money or free from your SP. There also is a question about 3g Networks, there are two different bands used in different places. I think the US uses 1900mHz, the EU etc use 2100 mHz. As for coverage, there are in the US two GSM bands. 1900mHz bands cover about 80% of the population, but around 20% of the area. 850mHz covers the old AT&T Wirless network coverage area, which is more than 99% of the US. However there is no such thing as 100% coverage anywhere with cell phones, if you want that you have to use a satellite phone. The best are combined satellite and quad band GSM with roaming agreements, so when you are within the coverage area of any GSM network you use that, but if you are in one of the few (in the US), or many outside, areas without GSM coverage, you use the satellite. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
#2
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![]() People who travel know this and either buy an unlocked US GSM phone (850/1900mHz), or buy a multiband phone that includes the US bands. If you have a EU only (900/1800) phone, you can often rent a US one for little money or free from your SP. There also is a question about 3g Networks, there are two different bands used in different places. I think the US uses 1900mHz, the EU etc use 2100 mHz. As for coverage, there are in the US two GSM bands. 1900mHz bands cover about 80% of the population, but around 20% of the area. 850mHz covers the old AT&T Wirless network coverage area, which is more than 99% of the US. However there is no such thing as 100% coverage anywhere with cell phones, if you want that you have to use a satellite phone. The best are combined satellite and quad band GSM with roaming agreements, so when you are within the coverage area of any GSM network you use that, but if you are in one of the few (in the US), or many outside, areas without GSM coverage, you use the satellite. No GSM phones here... can't remember what the protocol they use here is, but it doesn't work anywhere else, and nobody else's phones work here. Not sure what the law here is regarding satellite phones. |
#3
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Brenda Ann wrote:
No GSM phones here... can't remember what the protocol they use here is, but it doesn't work anywhere else, and nobody else's phones work here. Not sure what the law here is regarding satellite phones. Where is here? The OP was discussing the US, and bringing phones from outside the US, so I focused on that. BTW, back before we had GSM service here (Israel), the companies we had used NAMPS and DAMPS. They both would provide you a GSM phone and a SIM if you want to use them outside of the country. The company I worked for had several people who traveled often, so we rented tri band GSM phones from them and got a SIM for each of us. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
#4
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radioguy wrote:
wrong. I paid full price for my GSM cell phone. I did NOT get any discounts on it at all. There is not any slot to put sim cards into. Not even if you tak it apart. There is no any way to reprogram the sim number associated with the cell phone, not even if you take it apart. Then it is NOT a GSM cell phone. The GSM specification includes a smartcard subscriber identity module (SIM), which minimally includes enough information that the phone system can identify the unqiue phone, which ultimately gives it a telephone number, etc, a caller directory, a record of SMS messages sent and received, etc. And it IS a multi-band cell phone. These are the GSM phones sold in the U.S. It could be a TDMA or CDMA phone, in the U.S. they use 800 and 1900 mHz. So there is no way to bring our U.S. cell phones to Europe or Australia or anywhere else in the world and use it there by just puttting in a different sim card (oer different sim number) like the Eurropeas and Australians and the reast of the world say we can. Sure you can. I know people who do it all the time, both ways. The GSM cell phones sold in the U.S. an NOT be unlocke, even if you try taking them apart to do it. The cell phone companies won't allow it, even though the law here requires otherwise. So I don't know how they get away with it, but they do. They are not GSM phones. GSM service providers will unlock phones, for example Cingular, for a fee, or in some cases for free. There is also a booming business of ilicit phone unlocking, unlocking equipment, etc. In fact, GSM is not the only system that uses SIM cards, Motorola's MIRS network (called iDen in the US) also uses them. That causes a lot of confusion when people bring iDEN phones here and expect to use them on a GSM network. BTW, one of our SP's operates an 800mHz CDMA network and has roaming agreements with US SP's. A friend of mine was here in April and his us CDMA phone roamed onto their network when he turned it on. It was so expensive to use, he bought a GSM pay as you go phone for himself and his wife anyway. I'm going to speculate here, but I expect that if anyone is lying it was the person who sold you the phone. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
#5
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It's a shame most autopatches were disconnected from most ham
repeaters. Autopatches were good for getting at least some HOAs off your back for using your ht while portable. When they say something to you about it, just tell them it's your cell phone, then proceed to use the autopatch to call your wife or friend. You're not really lieing. After all, the cell phone companies copied the technology they're using from ham radio. If they ask why they can hear the other side talking also, just tell them it's a speaker cell phone. There's plenty of those around. My cell phone does do it. And now my regular landline phone does it also. |
#6
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I'm also sick of everyone saying "just use a payphone".
There are hardly any pay phones around anymore. There used to be lots. Now there's almost none. Sure, the little booths that say "phone" are still there, but the actual phones are not. And cell phone coverage does not work everywhere. In a fify mile radius, I have only found one pay phone recently. Places that used to have them have either taken them entirely out or have left the booths but taken out the phones. And yes, they used to be there years ago. I've seen them at those places back then. And when you can find a pay phone anymore, they usually don't work anymore. No dial tone. |
#7
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![]() "radioguy" wrote in message ... I'm also sick of everyone saying "just use a payphone". There are hardly any pay phones around anymore. There used to be lots. Now there's almost none. Sure, the little booths that say "phone" are still there, but the actual phones are not. And cell phone coverage does not work everywhere. In a fify mile radius, I have only found one pay phone recently. Places that used to have them have either taken them entirely out or have left the booths but taken out the phones. And yes, they used to be there years ago. I've seen them at those places back then. And when you can find a pay phone anymore, they usually don't work anymore. No dial tone. Most of the pay phones are for sale on ebay.. ![]() |
#8
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radioguy wrote:
There are hardly any pay phones around anymore. There used to be lots. Now there's almost none. Sure, the little booths that say "phone" are still there, but the actual phones are not. Here that has led to people putting in private pay phones in their store or restaurant. Some places that have seating or displays outside, such as the corner "minimarket" have them outside. However as soon as they close, the phone goes into the store and is locked up for the night. Of course we don't have the street crime problem the US has. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
#9
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![]() "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in message ... radioguy wrote: There are hardly any pay phones around anymore. There used to be lots. Now there's almost none. Sure, the little booths that say "phone" are still there, but the actual phones are not. Here that has led to people putting in private pay phones in their store or restaurant. Some places that have seating or displays outside, such as the corner "minimarket" have them outside. However as soon as they close, the phone goes into the store and is locked up for the night. Of course we don't have the street crime problem the US has. Geoff. They have the same thing here in S. Korea. There are Korea Telecom phone booths (none that I have seen use coins, they use something simiar to a credit card), but the vast majority of phone booths here are owned by businesses that set them out with their displays during business hours, and take them in at night. Those DO use coins, but of course since they are always in a spot where they are supervised, there isn't much of a theft problem. |
#10
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Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
radioguy wrote: There are hardly any pay phones around anymore. There used to be lots. Now there's almost none. Sure, the little booths that say "phone" are still there, but the actual phones are not. Here that has led to people putting in private pay phones in their store or restaurant. Some places that have seating or displays outside, such as the corner "minimarket" have them outside. However as soon as they close, the phone goes into the store and is locked up for the night. Of course we don't have the street crime problem the US has. Geoff. Neither do we. "Street crime" is an urban phenomenon; half of Americans do not live in central cities and their first ring of suburbs. |
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