No beccase the phone id is already registred
There is new lingo being released literally everyday. No matter the lingo both mobile and cell phone mean the same thing.
There are literally thousands of different cell phone providers, each offer pretty much the same service. For a set amount of money you get a certain amount of minutes.
No, a lot of the smaller providers do not make you sign a contract at all. They may not have as many cell towers though. The bigger providers all have about the same timeline for contracts and upgrades though.
Most cell phone providers have international phone options. Some even rent international phones. Another option is an international SIM card for your phone. You use your same number and billing for roaming goes on your credit card.
You have to call your provider and add the serial number to your account. Once this is done the other phone would be activated. If you have a GSM phone, after adding your serial number to the providers records, you can just swap the card in the back of the phone, back and forth as needed.
If you change a cell phone company you may be able to keep your same number, my mom did that she had the same number for as long as I remember, also if you live in Canada.
You could look it up in a phone book. If you have a mobile phone, call your mobile number from your home phone and it will be displayed. If you do not have a cell phone then call someone with a cell phone and do the same.
All cell phone providers will offer some type of Android phone. You could check such popular providers as Verizon, AT&T, Cingular, TMobile, or others. Most will carry the same Android phones, although some may carry additional models that are harder to find.
A number of phone service providers will allow you to switch and retain your current phone number. Whether or not Verizon will I cannot say for certain, and it may depend on which service plan you choose.
Don't rely on anyone else to tell you who the best cell phone providers are, figure it out for yourself. You need to know for yourself because other people don't have the same phone needs as you. They might need to use the internet on their phone all the time where you only need it for calls. They might not need to make as many long distance phone calls as you. Get some names of providers from friends, sure, but determine which provider you're going with for yourself.
When you're checking out cell phone providers, there are going to be a lot of different features you'll be presented with from these providers to help sway your decision. Even though it may seem like you sort of have to select a contracted plan, you really don't. Many of these contract plans will make it seem like you get a level of service that you couldn't get elsewhere, but it's just not true. In fact, many of the prepaid cell phone providers out there run off of the same network as the bigger companies, just totally under a different name.
Yes. The americans call it a cell due to the way the masts cover a small overlapping area (or cell).