- Jul 5, 2011
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Use double sided tape to make sure the nano sim doesn't fall out. An empty sim adapter in a slim problem equals broken phone.
Think I'll Go with at&t helping me with a sim card
Use double sided tape to make sure the nano sim doesn't fall out. An empty sim adapter in a slim problem equals broken phone.
Think I'll Go with at&t helping me with a sim card
They send the Sim with the phone when you order it.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 2
you guys think HTC one off-contract price = $599? (32GB)
Even if you buy it off contract?
I really think and hope this is the off contract price. The reason is since the developer edition is priced at $649, i see no reason an off-contract HTC One will be higher than that. If it is then, everyone who wants an off-contract HTC will just go for the DE HTC One. That's what i'm thinking.
Just call AT&T ..the rep said HTC one off-contract price is $549 and best buy is $699..so I just cancel my best buy order and go to AT&T tonight..
Best buy will price match
Sent from my HTC One X+ using Android Central Forums
I really think and hope this is the off contract price. The reason is since the developer edition is priced at $649, i see no reason an off-contract HTC One will be higher than that. If it is then, everyone who wants an off-contract HTC will just go for the DE HTC One. That's what i'm thinking.
The DE has 64GB..in addition to the unlocked goodies.
But I have read the Developer Edition WILL NOT work on Sprint...Is this correct? I would really like a Sprint phone that would still allow international roaming with a simple card purchase.
Introducing the HTC One Developer Edition, the most powerful smartphone HTC has delivered specifically for our developer community:
Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor
2 GB RAM
64 GB of storage
SIM and bootloader unlocked
Open APIs for Bluetooth Low Energy, Infrared, and more
Front-facing stereo speakers
Two dual-membrane microphones for recording
Multiple frequency compatibility:
HSPA/WCDMA: 850/1900/2100 MHz
GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
LTE: 700/850/AWS/1900 MHz (US)
Wouldn't buying a T-Mobile one "technically" be the best one to buy out of all of them? It includes all the bands needed for every GSM US and international (except for those weird ones) and includes AWS and LTE. T-Mobile said they have no problem unlocking your phone as long as it's paid off.
Technically. But one advantage of buying OEM unlocked over carrier unlocked is that you'd get updates as HTC pushes them out instead of a carrier sitting on it and choosing when to release it. Which, if you've owned an HTC device in the past you probably know how much of a concern over getting support there is. Some of it was on HTC of course, but some of it was also on the carriers too.
They won't price match the retail price, just the discounted price.