You should only need to "re-provision" the SIM if it is deactivated. Moving it phone to phone should be seamless.
I asked this question. They said once a SIM is deactivated and "retired" it can no longer be re-provisioned.
You should only need to "re-provision" the SIM if it is deactivated. Moving it phone to phone should be seamless.
I asked this question. They said once a SIM is deactivated and "retired" it can no longer be re-provisioned.
think that long time verizon customers are going to take awhile to get used to SIM card tech. but it actually will be great in the long run.. but take it from someone that has to go some cdma only devices to LTE ones on a weekly basis.. its annoying as heck...
I thought it was always this way for SIM cards? If you change the phone number you need a new SIM. At least that's been my experience with T-Mobile. It was always a pain to go into store for a new SIM, but I only had to do that if the phone number changed.
Overall, I love the SIM cards. Once we get more phones with them, just swapping them and we're good instead of going through the activation procedure online.
That is interesting, because I know that IDEN (Nextel) phones are sim-card based, and I have changed numbers on them many times.
Also I wonder if you can take you sim out of a verizon LTE phones and put it into another one? because don't the phones use cdma for voice and 3g data which cannot easily be switched to another device.
Had this problem too when I got the phone on a new line and tried to switch to my main account. I guess us VZW customers aren't used to the idea. They also told me not to ever *228 the thunderbolt as it will cause a problem. Ended up having to get my phone replaced anyway (stuck power button) so I got a new sim regardless.
i de and reactivated on same number - if i'm reading your post correctly, you activated it on one line and wanted to switch to another? i can see how the sim would only be able to be used on the one number - it isn't 'retired' per se, it is assigned to that phone number it ws actiavted on, and cannot be re-assigned... if you were just trying to re-activate on the same number with the same SIM, then the tech is full of crap, it works
I travel to Europe quite a bit. I would just deactive my Dinc and activate my my D2G on that line and come back and reactivate my Dinc.
With the TB am I good to do the same as long as I don't change the phone to a different phone #? or anytime I swap I will need a new sim card?
uhm.. i think your brain is "retired".. Did you even read the post.
The problem is when you activate the sim with a phone and then deactivate it and then try to reactivate it on a different phone. You can't do that and expect the sim card to change phone numbers. It gets locked with the first phone number you activated with.
You just simply deactivated your TB with the sim card and then reactivated later it using the same sim card on the same phone/phone number.
Essentially.. like any sim card carrier.. t-mob/att, sim cards get locked with the first number that you activate it with.. this is not unheard of and has always been the case.
When activating with the sim card, make sure you are first doing it with the phone that has the phone number you want locked into the sim card.
I thought it was always this way for SIM cards? If you change the phone number you need a new SIM. At least that's been my experience with T-Mobile. It was always a pain to go into store for a new SIM, but I only had to do that if the phone number changed.
Overall, I love the SIM cards. Once we get more phones with them, just swapping them and we're good instead of going through the activation procedure online.
Hey guys I'm sure you all have figured this out by now but if not here's the run down I got at my job:
If you are doing an alternate upgrade you will need a 2nd sim card.
If you are switching between phone #'s you will need multiple some as well.
If you are just switching between phones on one line you will only need one sim.
Apparently the sim cards Verizon is using will only work with one phone #.