yes it is
The first "Disposable" cell phone was made in 1959 by Randi Altschul.
The disposable cell phone was patented in November of 1999. It was released shortly thereafter; most likely in the early months of the 21st century.
The cell phone was first thought of as far back as 1930. In 1947 Bell Labs made a cell phone, but it was only a prototype. Dr. Martin Cooper in 1974 made the cell phone that was very much like we use today. From 1974 to 1984 his phone was only used by government agencies. In 1984 it was sold to the public.
Yes if you set up the texting service.
She invented the world's first disposable cell phone!
Disposable cell phones is just another way of saying, "pre-paid" cell phones. The phones hold a charge and can be used as a cell phone from a major company, but as soon as a person runs out of minutes or air time, the phone is no longer usable.
cell phone
am i able to get a free cell phone today
No reason why not - providing the phone has sufficient credit to connect the call.
Bell labs made a first cell phone in 1947, but Dr. Martin Cooper in 1973 made a cell phone most like we have today.
Cell phone boosters are designed to increase the signal strength of phones to increase call quality. There are many cell phone boosters available on the market today.
While most prepaid cell phones are not disposable phones, most disposable cell phones are prepaid phones. Disposables have not really caught on in the U.S., since pretty decent prepaid phones can be purchased, on sale, for as little as $20 or even $10, while some disposables cost upward of $50. Prepaid carriers also offer advanced phone equipment that can cost over $100 and comes with a year warranty; such phones are hardly disposable. There are different concepts of disposable cell phones. The phone is often an unlocked phone usable with almost any carrier, but not necessarily. The instrument has very limited functionality: you can talk, and you can text. It might not have a display of any kind. It might come with minutes, or you may need to contact a prepaid carrier to purchase minutes. But the main idea is that the phone is ready to go, or just about; requires no contract or any kind of sign-up; and is cheap enough that you're comfortable tossing it after using it for just one vacation or even just one hour of talk. Some companies offer a small refund on phones returned for recycling. Because there is no record of a purchaser, disposable phones are suspect tools of terrorists, recent news articles state.