Trust me, I wish it was different, I want this phone too but, I am not willing to give up my unlimited Verizon LTE Data plan....it would just cost so much to go to a metered plan.
Went on a Verizon chat to bring up the lack of support for the new Windows phones. The reps exact words were "I do understand, but why settle for something less when you can get the amazing iphones or samsung phones." I LOL'd at that one. Pretty ridiculous.
I'll look at AT&T's plan pricing but if it's back to paying $100 + for one line after finally being able to enjoy a much lower monthly bill I might have to stick with Verizon and (gasp) buy an iPhone/Galaxy. This.really.sucks.
Due to Verizon's security on their network, unlocked phones wont work on Verizon's CDMA network (even if it DID support the correct bands for it).
Nice benefit is GSM phones on AT&T work anywhere in the world... except on Verizon (+Sprint) which has it's proprietary network lock in.
We pay $90 for 2 lines on AT&T so it would be impressive to pay more for one. Unless you're wanting masses of data. But I can't believe Verizon was giving masses for free...
In-laws moved from Verizon to AT&T and monthly bill went down.
Nice benefit is GSM phones on AT&T work anywhere in the world... except on Verizon (+Sprint) which has it's proprietary network lock in.
Just so you know, the GLOBAL standards for Cell phones IS GSM. When it comes to the gobal market Microsoft's goal, allow access to the most customers in the world. Verizon uses a Key for CDMA and it's about the only one in the gobal marketplace (as far as I know). When you look at the big picture, making the phone in the global standards (that includes AT&T as they are primary GSM), is the most important to them.
Due to Verizon's security on their network, unlocked phones wont work on Verizon's CDMA network (even if it DID support the correct bands for it). Wile it might be possable to use it on their LTE network for some things, 1/2 the features would not work and call quality would be questionable. The 3G network is still used for texts and the fallback network (so you dont drop calls). The advanages of Verizon's network would be gone if you lost CDMA access (dead spots would be more common and no signal areas would be in more places than you know).
No matter how many people here WANT the 950 and 950XL to work on Verizon and how some numbers MIGHT match up as for band, it will not fully work on Verizon and would not even be worth trying.
The ONLY way to get a fully working phone with all features is for Verizon to add the phone to their selection to add the feature set needed.
If you want this phone on Verizon, everyone get on the phone and ask for it, keep calling, it's the only way it MIGHT come. SO if your thinking about spending $550-650 on a phone and it will just work on Verizon like your current one does, you will be VERY dispointed.
Trust me, I wish it was different, I want this phone too but, I am not willing to give up my unlimited Verizon LTE Data plan....it would just cost so much to go to a metered plan.
I checked with AT&T and it looks like I'd be paying $55/month with 2GB instead of the new $51/1GB rate that Verizon's new plan affords me. Since the AT&T appears to be more bang for my buck (even though I don't really need the extra gig) so maybe the outlook isn't as bleak.
*wipes brow*
I'm still getting a 950!!! F%^& yeah!
'Except iphone and nexus phones can work on all US carriers and globally as well. for example, see the specs for nexus 5x here LG Nexus 5X - Full phone specifications
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With No agreement with Verizon ? It would of been nice if Microsoft talked to Verizon to make this happen in an unlocked model like this but, Of course VSW didn't care (Was bettiing more VZW than Microsoft but, what do I know ?)
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With No agreement with Verizon ? It would of been nice if Microsoft talked to Verizon to make this happen in an unlocked model like this but, Of course VSW didn't care (Was bettiing more VZW than Microsoft but, what do I know ?)
Many Sprint and Verizon phones now have SIM cards, but that isn't because of CDMA. The SIM cards are generally there for Sprint's and Verizon's 4G LTE networks, because the LTE standard also uses SIM cards. The phones may also have SIM slots to support foreign GSM networks as "world phones." But those carriers still use CDMA to authenticate their phones on their own home networks.