yes u can
No. The networks used by T-Mobile and Sprint are incompatible. You can, however, keep your same phone number in lots of cases.
Wireless networks are not laid out using the same topologies as wired networks. They have their own, different layouts. Smaller wireless networks, in which a small number of nodes closely positioned need to exchange data, can be arranged in an ad hoc fashion.
No you donot .
Yes, especially if the networks employ subnets.
The IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) number is specific to the handset. The mobile number is associated with the SIM card. If you swap a different SIM card into the mobile phone, it will have a different mobile number but the same IMEI number. The mobile company will have a record of the IMEI of the handset that used a particular mobile number for a particular call, and your mobile provider has a record of the IMEI of any phone you purchased from them, but you cannot in general trace the IMEI by the mobile number.
Dial the UK mobile number exactly the same way you do when the mobile is at home in the UK. The mobile network will automatically locate it.
Mobile Directory Number The actual phone number one would dial to reach a specific mobile phone. Prior to Wireless Number Portability, MDN was the same number as the MIN for many mobile phones. But now that MDN numbers can be ported (moved) to other carriers, MDN and MIN will be different for ported numbers.
unfortunately not, it is the same as other mobile networks . glad i could help.....
NO
There are increasingly apparent limitations of Bayesian Networks. For real-world applications, they are not expressive enough. Bayesian networks have the problem that involves the same fixed number of attributes.
The regulator Ofcom publishes lists of which numbers have been allocated to which operator. However, you will need at least 5, or sometimes 6, digits to determine the operator owning a block of numbers. Note that this will only tell you which company was originally issued the numbers. It is quite possible for people to take their numbers with them when they move to a different mobile network entirely.
That depends. If you are calling a mobile phone with a Fresno number, from a landline in Fresno, you can dial just the 7-digit number. If the mobile phone has a different area code, you will almost always need to dial it, and in many states if the mobile phone is not a local number for you, you may need to dial the area code, even if it's the same as your own.