When a mobile phone is roaming in Another Country, you dial its number exactly the same way you do when it is in its home country. The mobile network will automatically find the user, and the roaming user will pay any applicable international roaming charges.
A Cingular cellphone is a phone that is tailored or made specifically for the Cingular cellphone network. Cingular at the time had a GSM network that used a specific cellphone band to make and receive calls.
The current OnStar modules include the ability to do hands free calling. The phones are part of the Verizon network and can be added to the family plan.
China has the world's biggest cellphone network in terms of customers which are more than 525 million (January 2010).
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No
You can connect it to your cellphone (BluePhoneElite for Macs) or you can use VOiP (internet-calling) with Skype or any other network (this costs money), but Skype allows you a couple of free calls per account.
The worlds largest bike path network is in Bogota Colombia
There is no Novell client software for a cellphone but your network administrator may allow you to log in via a web page. Ask him/her for more info.
no, DSi is not a cellphone and can't use those network
no it dose not different bands at&t is a gsm network.
Text voting network offers a cellphone text voting service. Their blog is linked below.
You dial the U.S. cellphone number exactly the same way you do when it is in the U.S., no matter where in the world it is roaming. The cellular network will automatically find them, and the roaming user will pay any roaming charges, according to their calling plan. The downside is that someone in the UK also has to dial the US number, even when the US cellphone is in the UK.