I cannot stress enough that this will not work in the United States. You need a V1 SIM, and just about every SIM here is a V2 SIM. All you will do is fry your SIM, and possibly quickly get a (very unpleasant) call from your carrier's fraud/security department.
No- what we're doing is grabbing he info from an AT&T SIM, not actually using it. The other carrier's SIM goes on top- it's up to the user to ask if they have v1 SIMs.
Forgot to add (whoops)- this is for people in other countries, not in America (the T-Mobile users can wait for the German iPhone- T-Mobile has a policy of not locking phones to a single country's T-Mobile).
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Christopher Price @ Aug 15th 2007 5:57PM
I cannot stress enough that this will not work in the United States. You need a V1 SIM, and just about every SIM here is a V2 SIM. All you will do is fry your SIM, and possibly quickly get a (very unpleasant) call from your carrier's fraud/security department.
- Christopher Price
http://www.phonenews.com
Jamar @ Aug 17th 2007 12:24AM
No- what we're doing is grabbing he info from an AT&T SIM, not actually using it. The other carrier's SIM goes on top- it's up to the user to ask if they have v1 SIMs.
Jamar @ Aug 17th 2007 12:26AM
Forgot to add (whoops)- this is for people in other countries, not in America (the T-Mobile users can wait for the German iPhone- T-Mobile has a policy of not locking phones to a single country's T-Mobile).