Tag Archives: Sprint

Why Can’t I move my Sprint phone to Verizon?

For the longest time, the the issue with the US smartphone market was that you had to purchase the phones directly from the Cellular company.  The companies sold you the phone locked to their network.   Each carrier had their own rules on unlocking the phones.   Carriers held you hostage such that once you completed your contract, you would have to purchase another smartphone to move to a different carrier, making it financially prohibitive.     In the rest of the world,  purchasing a phone and buying service were 2 completely separate transactions.   The phones are sold completely unlocked. You are not tied to someone’s lousy network just because of  a locked phone.  Unlocking is a process by which you can take the phone to another carrier and use it on the new carrier.    For example taking an AT&T phone to T-Mobile etc.  Unlocking a phone is typically for GSM carrier (more on that later)

The US market is slowly evolving thanks to T-Mobile’s Uncarrier initiative.  Down the road,  purchasing the phone and finding a carrier are going to be 2 completely separate transactions.   And that is a great thing.  Why? Because carriers had you hoodwinked.  They would sign you up for a 2 year contract and give you a new phone for $200.  If used that same phone after the 2 years were up, your bill never went down.  No more,  now your bill will go down after you have paid off your phone,   the new transparency forces the carrier to be more ethical and fair – Thank you John Legere and T-Mobile

The USA cell phone market is divided into 2 different technologies GSM and CDMA.  AT&T/ T-Mobile are GSM providers ( think SIM card) and Verizon/Sprint are CDMA providers.  Further complicating the issue is the frequency that is used by the carriers – 800, 850, 1900.  For  a  phone to work to work on a different carrier, it should be able to accept that technology and frequency – think radio.

Verizon and Sprint being CDMA carriers require you to call them to activate the phone.  The phones IMEI number must be in their database for the phone to work.  The CDMA carriers marry the IMEI number to the phone number.  This is essentially a CDMA limitation.  Sprint and Verizon  have a gentlemen’s agreement (collusion) where they will not activate each other’s phones.  Your Verizon phone should for all practical purposes work on Sprint but Sprint will not put the IMEI number in their database.  Sprint will only accept the IMEI number from the manufacturer.   They will not insert a new IMEI number in their database.  Same for Verizon

Take the Sprint iphone 4s/5/5c/5s/6 or Sprint Samsung Galaxy.  Read the specs.  They have the GSM bands to support T-Mobile/AT&T etc but when you insert the T-Mobile sim in the phone, it will not work – Why because the phone is locked to Sprint.  Sprint will not unlock the phone no matter what.  Even after you complete your contract and have fully paid for that phone.   This is how Sprint unethically and desperately holds on to you .  Their last hope is to make it financially prohibitive for you to switch carriers,  You want to move to a different carrier – no problem just buy a new phone (but we really don’t want you to leave).

Recently however Google and Apple have decided to sell fully unlocked versions of their flagship products directly on their websites.

Apple iphone 6/6plus from Apple’s Website

The unlocked iPhone includes all the features of iPhone but without a wireless contract commitment or a carrier installment plan. You can activate and use the unlocked iPhone on the supported wireless network of your choice, such as AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, or Sprint in the United States.

The unlocked iPhone does not come with a nano-SIM card for iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 5s, or iPhone 5c so you’ll need to get one from any supported carrier worldwide. To start using your iPhone, simply insert the SIM card into the slot and turn on iPhone by pressing and holding the On/Off button for a few seconds. Then follow the onscreen instructions to set up your iPhone.

Purchasing an unlocked iPhone means you will not qualify for the lower iPhone price associated with a contract or a carrier installment plan. The unlocked iPhone 6 model is A1586. The unlocked iPhone 6 Plus model is A1524. The T-Mobile iPhone 6 model is A1549. The T-Mobile iPhone 6 Plus model is A1522. For details on LTE network support, please see www.apple.com/iphone/LTE.

The IMEI numbers of the A1586 and A1524 versions of the iphones will be in both the Sprint and Verizon databases.

Google Nexus 6 purchased directly from the Google Play store 

This phone will work on Sprint, Verizon,  AT&T, T-Mobile and every other GSM provider.  This phone is fully unlocked for all GSM carriers and the Google Play version of the phone will have the IMEI number in both the Sprint and Verizon databases

Caution:  Only the Nexus 6 purchased from the Google Play store will work on all carriers.  If you purchase the Nexus 6 directly from Verizon, Sprint will not activate it or the other way around.

You can use the Google Play version of this phone on Sprint, give them the IMEI number and they will activate it.  If you do not like Sprint service, call Verizon and give them the IMEI number and that phone will work on Verizon.  You can take an AT&T sim card to that phone and AT&T will become your new carrier.   You can move this phone to Cricket, , Straightalk, T-Mobile, Metro PCS, by just inserting the SIM cards of the new GSM carrier.

At the end of the day it is your phone and Google  and Apple have done us a great service into making sure that you use that phone on every carrier in the world.

Why you should never pay the $36 Sprint Activation fees

Okay so you have decided to go with Sprint and their extremely low priced advertised plans.  You are slowly going to discover that there are plenty of hidden, non-advertised fees.  Sprint is going to get you one way or the other.   Sprint has a lot of “Just Because” fees.  These are fees that Sprint charges just because they feel that they can get away with it.  Us consumers have been trained to pay these “just because fee” by the likes of Airlines, Banks, Hotels, Healthcare providers  and now telecom.   One of the hidden fees is the $36/line activation fee.  Another well thought of fee is a low monthly charge fee of $7.99/line, it is called an Account Spending limit fee (ASL) .  If your bill is low, Sprint charges you a $7.99/line  fee just so you give Sprint the privilege of being your carrier.  I leave it up to you to tell Sprint where they can stick that privilege 🙂

Here is the reason you should never pay and how you can argue against this $36/line activation fee. Keep in mind AT&T and Verizon do charge you when you set up a new line of Service and you should be able to argue that piece away because T-Mobile does not have those hidden charges.  Competition Rocks!!

Sprint is a CDMA carrier unlike AT&T and T-Mobile that are GSM carriers.  With GSM carriers,  to move to a new phone all you need is the SIM card from the old device and move it to the new device and it works.  If the SIM card is a different size you can cut the SIM card yourself using a SIm cutter that you get on ebay for $5.   If the SIM card needs to be larger you can get a SIM adapter on ebay for $1.  You do not have to call your GSM carrier just because you got a new phone.  If you purchased that phone for full price on ebay, amazon or swappa.com  – you do not even have to tell the GSM carrier, the IMEI number of your new phone.  The IMEI number of the phone should really not be shared with anyone for security concerns.

CDMA carriers are  different.  CDMA requires you to call in to the carrier and they will match the phone IMEI number in their database to the phone number that they assign you.

When you call Sprint to activate the phone – they marry  the IMEI number of the handset  to the phone number.  This is inherently a CDMA limitation.  Sprint uses this limitation to their advantage and they charge you a $36 activation fee/line to marry the IMEI with the phone number – something they need to do anyway to give you Sprint’s CDMA service.

My question is why would you pay Sprint for an inherent limitation with their CDMA technology?

Truly Something to think about and Argue against.

Shortlink to this page   http://bit.ly/1nqIFit

Think twice before you get the Sprint iphone 6 or Iphone 6 plus

Update:

Sprint on 2/11/2015 did an about turn and decided to unlock iphone 5c, 5s , 6 and 6 plus.  This was counter to what they had been professing all along.

Sprint still refuses to unlock the iphone 4s and the iphone 5.   

Rob Pegorara @ Yahoo tech wrote an article on which carrier has the best deal on the iphone 6 with 2 GB of data  (https://www.yahoo.com/tech/iphone-6-plans-compared-at-t-verizon-sprint-and-97601904249.html) Rob did a great job of analyzing different plans and determining which carrier to go with.  Rob however does not take into account the Residual resale value of the iphone 6. No one really knows what the residual value will be down the road.  However, the Sprint iphone 6 or 6 plus will have the least residual value because Sprint will not unlock the iphone 6.  I would highly recommend that you take that into account when you are deciding on your iphone 6 AT&T and T-mobile iphones are portable once unlocked and can be used on each others GSM networks.  The Verizon iphone is GSM unlocked and can be used on either the T-Mobile or AT&T network once it is has been activated on the Verizon network.  The Sprint iphone 6 has the GSM bands to work on AT&T and T-Mobile but Sprint will not unlock the iphone. Sprint is a completely different story.  They will not unlock the phone – read my blog on

Sprint – Do the ethical thing and unlock our Contract free iphones

Sprint in their unlocking policy clearly stated that  “Sprint is working to ensure that all devices developed and launched on or after February 11, 2015, are capable of being unlocked domestically.” Since the iphone 6 was launched on September 19th,  2014, it will not be unlocked by Sprint.  

What does that mean to you

1) That phone will always be tied to the Sprint Network 2) You cannot take that phone with you, if and when you want to leave Sprint.  Sure, you can take the iphone with you, it will just be a very expensive ipod! 3) You can try selling/trading it but because that phone is not portable,  it will always have the lowest resale value. Rani Molla wrote an excellent blog on Where can you trade in your iPhone for the most money?.  If you see the graphic in the blog,  you will notice that the Sprint iphone consistently has the lowest resale value. Like I said – think twice. Update – the New iphone 6 bursts all the myths in Sprints unlock policy.  You can read all about it here     store.apple.com/us/browse/over short link to this page http://bit.ly/1xeZznw

Sprint – Do the ethical thing and unlock our Contract free iphones ( 4s and 5)

Our 2 years are up. We have paid for those iphones and fulfilled our Obligation. Sprint is refusing to unlock OUR iphones for domestic use.

We completed our contract with Sprint. We have in good faith paid for 2 years of Sprint Service.  During those 2 years most of us have endured dropped calls, tower upgrades, extremely poor data speeds and last but not least, the pathetic Sprint customer Service, which has re-written the book on Customer Apathy. Now after the 2 years are up, Sprint is refusing to unlock our iphones for domestic use. 

This article has been updated on 2/11/2015  ( originally written May 2014)
Update 
On 2/11/2015 – Sprint updated their unlock policy to provide domestic unlocks for Iphones 5c and above.  Sprint is still not providing Domestic unlocks for iphones 4s and iphone 5
Prior to 2/11/2015 Sprint had maintained that
“”Specifically, devices manufactured with a SIM slot within the past three years (including, but not limited to, all Apple iPhone devices), cannot be unlocked to accept a different domestic carrier’s SIM for use on another domestic carrier’s network. Sprint has no technological process available to do this.”
So what changed and what prompted Sprint to do a reversal on their unlock policy?  Well the CTIA agreement went in effect and Sprint was forced to do the right thing and unlock the iphones.
Why is Sprint not unlocking the older 4s and 5?  Why this continued unethical stance?

We have fulfilled the one-sided Sprint contract (which by the way, does not guarantee service) and our end of the bargain. All the other major carriers – AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile unlock their iphones after the first few  payments are made on time.  Verizon LTE phones come factory unlocked. You can put a T-Mobile or AT&T sim card in a Verizon iphone 5 ( or higher) and it will start showing T-Mobile or AT&T as the carrier.  This is relevant  because the Verizon iphone 5/5c/5s shares the same FCC id and Apple part number as its Sprint counterpart.   They are the same device!!  Sprint has willfully told Apple to lock the GSM portion of the iphone

These phones are useless in the US, unless they are used on the Sprint network. Why does Sprint feel like they want to hold their customers hostage? They do not own the iphones. We customers who have paid for these phones own them. This was a purchase – not a lease.  Sprint or any other corporation for that matter needs to earn our business by providing a quality service and by providing value. I can understand Sprint not unlocking device prior to the completion of the contract as those devices are subsidized and Sprint needs to recover their part of the subsidy. However once the contract is paid for, whether by completion or by paying a contract cancellation fee, Sprint is MORALLY and ETHICALLY required to unlock those devices. Sprint however, even refuses to unlock iphones that were purchased from the Apple Store and paid in full.

 By refusing to unlock our devices Sprint is knowingly hurting the consumers specifically those that trusted Sprint by signing their 2 year contract. Nowhere in that contract does it say that the device will permanently be locked to the sprint network.  Moving to different carrier becomes financially prohibitive as consumers have to shell out another $200-$800 for another device. Why should the US consumers do that – we have a perfectly good phone.  Once Sprint unlocks those devices, the GSM bands on those devices will allow consumers to move to cheaper carriers like Straight talk, T-Mobile, Metro PCS, Cricket, and even AT&T. Why would Sprint want to treat their customers who have completed their contracts this way? This is an act of pure desperation by a sinking ship.  Survey Says “31% of Sprint subscribers whose contracts were up within the next six months wanted to find a new carrier.”  (http://bgr.com/2014/01/16/t-mobile-sprint-subscriber-additions-analysis).  Making it financially prohibitive to leave is the last option Sprint has to stop the customer from fleeing!

Sprint Reps will tell you that the devices cannot be unlocked or it is technically impossible or the phones are not designed to work on US GSM networks. That is a bunch of bull.  Sprint is willing to unlock the devices for international use, as mentioned in their unlock policy. If you take a Sprint Internationally unlocked phone and take a NON-US SIM card to the phone, while still in the US   – AT&T or T-Mobile show up as the carrier.  Any calls using that NON-US Sim card will be routed on the AT&T or T-Mobile network.  How can Sprint claim that the device is not “designed” to work on US GSM carriers.   This is a World phone and last time I checked  the US was part of it.   More importantly as pointed out by @cpvideomaker  the carrier bundles of all the US carriers are already present in the Sprint iphone

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Sprint came up with its unlocking policy in November of 2013.  However, Sprint started selling the iphones in October 2011.  There was no unlock policy in place when Sprint started selling us the phones.  When Sprint shipped the first batch of iphone 4S’s back in October 2011 – they were fully unlocked.   I mentioned the facts to a Sprint customer “disservice” rep and his answer was “this is a legal issue”.   Okay then – game on.

Excerpt from their unlocking policy:

“Specifically, devices manufactured with a SIM slot within the past three years (including, but not limited to, all Apple iPhone devices), cannot be unlocked to accept a different domestic carrier’s SIM for use on another domestic carrier’s network. Sprint has no technological process available to do this.”

Sprint is absolutely  correct in saying that it is impossible for Sprint to unlock the phone.  “Sprint has no technological process available to do this.”   They really don’t and they are using words to confuse you.  This falls under corporate double speak.   That is because this is not a Sprint phone, it is an Apple phone.  Sprint does not own the hardware or the firmware on the phone.  The only thing Sprint has on this device is very small Carrier Specific prl file that is downloaded over the Air.   There is no Sprint logo on the hardware or the software when you boot up the phone.

Apple can and will unlock the device once they receive the request from Sprint. All Sprint needs to do is to file a request with Apple and the Technical Marvel that is Apple will take care of the rest.   It is the same procedure that Sprint employs when they request Apple to unlock the phone for International use.    Hint! Hint! Sprint DOES NOT have the “technological process” to unlock the phone for international use either.  All they do is place the request to Apple.  For fully factory unlocking the phone, It is an extra check box on the request.  It is truly as simple as that.

Sprint does not have access to the internals of the iphone.  To unlock the phone you need access to the activation_records folder in the Lockdown directory of the phone.  Only Apple has access to that directory.

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As far as Sprint is concerned, this is a process issue and not a technical issue.   Once Apple receives the request from Sprint, they will be more than happy to unlock the phone.  All Apple needs is the serial number from Sprint.   Apple will move the serial number of the phone into their white database.  Restore your iphone via itunes on an internet connected computer, itunes will connect to the white database behind the Apple firewall, verify that your phone serial number is in the white database and you have an unlocked phone.  AT&T and T-mobile file that same request with Apple once you clear certain criteria.  Verizon does not need to file the request as their phones are already unlocked.  AT&T has a web page where you can enter your phone information and the request is automatically sent to Apple  (see link  for AT&T Unlock ) Why can’t Sprint do the same?   Why is Sprint the only company that is holding your phone hostage?

This is a process that Sprint does not want to undertake and their clueless, poorly trained CSR’s have given out a lot of technically incorrect information. Those CSRs have been brainwashed into believing that the phone just cannot be unlocked and they have even gone as far as calling people who want their fully paid for phones unlocked as  “entitled”.   Are you kidding me?   Does anyone at Sprint even understand how mobile networks work? Or how a world phone like a CDMA iphone 4s (or higher) , can work on ANY GSM network?  Look a the Specs of the CDMA iphone.  It has all the GSM frequencies available on that device.  Speaking of entitlement, What entitles Sprint to hold my fully paid for device hostage? Sprint is, in all reality, banking on the gullibility of the American Consumer and getting away with double speak and misinformation.  I am very surprised that the FCC  or the FTC have not fined them for blatantly misleading the American Consumer.  What say you Chairman Wheeler@ FCC or Chairwoman Ramirez@FTC?   Sprint is also misrepresenting the abilities of Apple’s flagship product.  Tim Cook are you really going to stand for that? I am guessing Apple allows Sprint to misrepresent their Intellectual Property as that means more iphones get sold.  Mr Cook  haven’t you sold enough iphones.  This inaction by Apple is morally reprehensible. For Further proof read Apple’s Unlock Policy.  It clearly states “You can unlock your iPhone for use with different carriers.”

  1. See if your carrier offers unlocking.  Only your carrier can unlock your iPhone.
  2. Contact your carrier and request an unlock. You might need to meet requirements to qualify for unlocking. After your carrier submits the unlocking request, it may take up to seven days.

Apple unlock policy clearly states that they will unlock the phone once they receive the request from the Carrier.  They leave it up to the carrier to decide if the carrier wants to unlock the phone. As a matter of last resort Sprint will offer to give you the Master Subsidy Lock (MSL code) for the iphone.  The MSL code does not work for Apple devices because the firmware on the Apple devices has not been written by Sprint.    Apple does not allow anyone to write anything to their phones – they have full control on the device.    The MSL works for the CDMA portion of the devices where Sprint wrote the firmware.  We are not asking to unlock the CDMA part of the device – just the GSM radiios which have nothing to do with MSL.  Take the HTC EVO, when you start that phone, the Sprint logo comes up – because Sprint wrote some of the software on that phone.  When you start the Apple phone – where is the Sprint logo – it does not exist – Why not? Apple WILL NOT give any carrier access to the internals of their device.   Apple controls the hardware, the software, the firmware, the eco-system and lets carriers have the privilege of carrying their phone.     Giving the MSL code is meant to send the Sprint customer on a wild goose chase.   Good luck taking that MSL code to the other carriers, they will not know what do with it.  Just to save you from this wild goose chase I will disclose the MSL code.  Drum Roll Please!!! .  The MSL code is 000000. Sprint is not going to unlock the iphones until it is publicly shamed to do the right thing.  Sprint reps  who seem to have extremely poor reading comprehension skills have been pointing out that all phones  will be unlocked on or after 2/112015.   Again this is a play on words and more misinformation from Sprint.  The policy states “Sprint has committed to ensure that all of its devices produced after February 11, 2015, are capable of being unlocked.”  That means that an iphone 6  or iphone 6 plus purchased brand new in March 2015 will not be eligible to be unlocked . Think twice before getting the Sprint version of the iphone 6 Sprint cut the BS. Unlock OUR FULLY PAID FOR Devices.

Like the facebook “Sprint – Do the ethical thing and unlock or Contract free iphones”  page.   We need to shame Sprint into doing the right thing.

Update : The iphone 6 released by Apple on Jan 6th 2014 bursts all the myths in Sprint’s Unlock policy.  You can purchase the phone directly from Apple (full price) and that single phone will work on every carrier.  Read about it here 

Some other options:

 Option 1 (as mentioned by the Sprint rep)

http://consumerist.com/2008/01/21/suing-big-companies-in-small-claims-court-is-fun-and-easy/

Does it work?  Keep in mind, AT&T refused to unlock iphones until a lot of small claims cases started popping up everywhere in the country.

Option 2

You have a very good phone that is completely paid for and Sprint is holding it hostage.  You do have the option to move to Ting, a Sprint MVNO  (https://ting.com)

Ting is an independent company and runs on the same Sprint Network.  It has 2 things going for it.  Depending on how much data you use, you could be getting your service about  5 times cheaper than Sprint and their customer service is 10x better.  A lot of Sprint phones will work on Ting.  They have a full list on their site.   They even have a complete comparison on how much you could save based on your  calling and data patterns.  Your Sprint bill has all the information you need for the comparison.   If you are a data hog, ting is not for you.

There is one issue with Ting that you need to be aware of.  You cannot move an active number from Sprint to Ting.   You will have to cancel your Sprint Service and sign up for a new service with Ting.  There is a very good possibility you will lose your current Phone number.

If you do decide to cancel your service make sure you cancel it 5 days prior to the monthly bill date.  If your phone is cancelled even 1 day after the bill date, Sprint will charge for the entire new month. There is no pro-rating of the bill with Sprint.  Sprint is a sinking ship and is losing customers by the boatload, they are truly desperate for your money.

Option 3

Unlock the Sprint phone using the SIM interposer method.

Disclaimer: I have no connection with this.  This is purely for informational purposes.  This unlock method may require you to jailbreak your phone and may not work with the next ios upgrade.   Jailbreaking your phone will void your warranty and you will forgo all future Apple support.  This is not a long term solution.

All information in this section falls under Use at your own risk.

There is a way to unlock the Sprint phone for about $10-$15.  The Sim interposer fakes the phone into believing you are using a Sprint SIM.   You can purchase GPP or “RSim Air” cards from Ebay and unlock the phone yourself.  Full set of instructions  for the GPP unlock can be found here. This Youtube video shows how to unlock using the R-Sim Air 2 (unlocks 5s and 5c for international only)  If you do buy the GPP or RSIM Air 2 from ebay make sure they give you a full refund.

There are people who claim they will unlock the phone for $50 to $100.  They are using the same methods above.  But do you really want to give them your phone with all your personal information and private photos  (frappening anyone!).  If you do follow this route, it is best that you do it yourself.  If for some reason you have to restore your phone, all the programming will disappear and you will have to run the entire unlock process again ( you do not have to purchase a new chip).  Do you want to keep paying someone every time you need to unlock?

Recently, I have heard of another unlock method call x-sim evo.  It does not require you to jailbreak the phone.  It is not widely available in the US yet but it seems to work.  You can purchase it on ebay. Here is the link for it .  It does not seem to have the battery drain issues that the R-SIM and GPP seem to have.  More importantly it seems to unlock even the iphone 6.

The need to unlock the phones has reached a critical point, I have seen 3rd party sites offering to factory unlock the phone and some even offering full money back guarantee.  The only way they can do that is if they are working directly with apple or an apple employee who has access to the internal apple databases and is unlocking phones on the side.   I have checked with my back channels at Apple and they claim that Apple is not working with anyone other than the carrier.    I have looked at these sites and some of them are mentioned here – there are others

  1.  http://www.legitunlockingcodes.com/sprint-unlock/  has the cheapest prices (for now)
  2. http://www.unlockboom.com/unlock-sprint-iphone-6-5s-5c-5-4s
  3.  http://www.jgtechblog.com/collections/frontpage/products/factory-unlock-supports-sprint-and-tmobile-not-clean-att-iphone-from-4s-5-5s-5c

 Option 4

This will literally take  less than 10 minutes of your time.  It is worth the effort.
Open a BBB case against Apple.  These BBB complaints go directly to Tim Cooks Office.
This is what you want to put in the complaint  (copy, paste and further embellish if you want to) :
I have completed my contract with Sprint and Sprint does not know how to unlock my iphone.  I know that you want me to contact Sprint to get the iphone unlocked but Sprint in their Unlock policy at (http://www.sprint.com/legal/unlocking_policy.html) clearly state that :
 
“Specifically, devices manufactured with a SIM slot within the past three years (including, but not limited to, all Apple iPhone devices), cannot be unlocked to accept a different domestic carrier’s SIM for use on another domestic carrier’s network. Sprint has no technological process available to do this”
 
At this point I am caught between 2 large corporations.  I can provide proof that I have in good faith completed my contract with Sprint and have fully paid for the device.
 
Sending me back to Sprint does not do me any good as Sprint has clearly said they do not have the technology to unlock my iphone.  If Apple does not unlock my iphone – I will have no choice but to jailbreak it and use a Sim Unlocker.   I rather not do that as I like the security that the Apple Eco-system provides.  Jailbreaking  puts me at another major disadvantage as It will also prevent me from upgrading to ios 8 until ios 8 is jailbroken.  This fully paid for iphone without a factory unlock is now a very expensive ipod.
 
I beg of you to understand the dilemma I am in and help me.  I truly appreciate any help you can provide.
Regardless of how this turns out, I will be a fervent Apple fan.  Keep up the great work.
 
Submit the complaint to Apple via the BBB and see what happens.  This is worth a shot because Apple does not want anyone to jailbreak their phones and get apps outside their eco-system.  This is something Apple holds sacred above all else.   They also want people to move to iOS 8 so that they can improve their stats against Android.

 Other Things You should do

1) Open a case with the FTC  ( www,ftc,gov).  FTC just fined AT&T for throttling unlimited users data and lying to the customer.
2) Open a case with the FCC (www.fcc.gov)
3) Open a case with the BBB against Sprint
4) Open a case with the Attorney General of your state.
short link to this page  http://bit.ly/1kbd7tE

Why the Nexus 5 is the Best Sprint Phone you should buy

For the longest time, the the issue with the US smartphone market was that you had to purchase the phones directly from the Cellular company.  The companies sold you the phone locked to their network.   Each carrier had their own rules on unlocking the phones.   Carriers held you hostage such that once you completed your contract, you would have to purchase another smartphone to move to a different carrier, making it financially prohibitive.     In the rest of the world,  purchasing a phone and buying service were 2 completely separate transactions.   The phones are sold completely unlocked. You are not tied to someone’s lousy network just because of  a locked phone.  Unlocking is a process by which you can take the phone to another carrier and use it on the new carrier.    For example taking an AT&T phone to T-Mobile etc.  

The US market is slowly evolving thanks to T-Mobile’s Uncarrier initiative.  Down the road,  purchasing the phone and finding a carrier are going to be 2 completely separate transactions.   And that is a great thing.  Why? Because carriers had you hoodwinked.  They would sign you up for a 2 year contract and give you a new phone for $200.  If used that same phone after the 2 years were up, your bill never went down.  No more,  now your bill will go down after you have paid off your phone,   the new transparency forces the carrier to be more ethical and fair – Thank you John Legere and T-Mobile

The USA cell phone market is divided into 2 different technologies GSM and CDMA.  AT&T/ T-Mobile are GSM providers ( think SIM card) and Verizon/Sprint are CDMA providers.  Further complicating the issue is the frequency that is used by the carriers – 800, 850, 1900.  For  a  phone to work to work on a different carrier, it should be able to accept that technology and frequency – think radio.

Verizon and Sprint being CDMA carriers require you to call them to activate the phone.  The phone IMEI number must be in their database for the phone to work.  Furthermore Sprint and Verizon  have a gentlemen’s agreement (collusion) where they will not activate each other’s phones.  Your Verizon phone should for all practical purposes work on Sprint but Sprint will not put the IMEI number in their database.  Sprint will only accept the IMEI number from the manufacturer.   Same for Verizon

Take the Sprint iphone 4s/5/5c/5s or Sprint Samsung Galaxy.  Read the specs.  They have the GSM bands to support T-Mobile/AT&T etc but when you insert the T-Mobile sim in the phone, it will not work – Why because the phone is locked to Sprint.  Sprint will not unlock the phone no matter what.  Even after you complete your contract and have fully paid for that phone.   This is how Sprint unethically and desperately holds on to you .  Their last hope is to make it financially prohibitive for you to switch carriers,  You want to move to a different carrier – no problem just buy a new phone (but we really don’t want you to leave).  

Enter the Nexus 5.  You can purchase it directly from the Google play store or used at swappa.com.  This phone will work on Sprint, AT&T, T-Mobile and every other GSM provider.  This phone is fully unlocked.    The only carrier the Nexus 5 does not work on is Verizon.  There in no reason for the phone to not work on Verizon (it has the verizon radios) other than Verizon will not activate it, presumably because this phone will break the gentlemen’s agreement with Sprint and expose their collusion.

You can use this phone on Sprint, give them the IMEI number and they will activate it.  If you do not like Sprint service – you can take an AT&T sim card to that phone and AT&T will become your new carrier.   You can move this phone to Cricket, , Straightalk, T-Mobile, Metro PCS, by just inserting the SIM cards of the new carrier.   At the end of the day it is your phone and Google has does us a great service into making sure that you use that phone on every carrier in the world (except Verizon)

 

 

short link to this page http://bit.ly/1ldRaMZ

 

Analyzing the Framily plan from Sprint – Amway Anyone?

In response to T-Mobile Uncarrier 4.0 strategy, Sprint had to come up with something.  Considering the statistics that an astounding 31% of the Sprint Customers want to leave Sprint, it was Hail Mary time for the soon to be #4 Carrier in America.  Enter the Framily plan which like T-Mobile’s Simple plan will do away with Contracts and Phone subsidies, but this is really where the similarities end.  Framily went step further and came up with their own version of Multilevel Marketing (Amway anyone),  but more on that later. Lets take a closer look at the pricing of the plan and the perceived savings.   I will explain later on how this plan is destined to ruin your Thanksgiving dinner.

Pros and Comparing Prices with T-Mobile

The Pros are pretty obvious.  You can now reduce your bill.  By coming up with the Framily plan even Sprint is admitting (what we have known all along) that they have been overcharging their customers for years.  Sprint was not #1 or #2 in the Market, so for years they had to compete strictly on better price and value.  They were doing a great job till about August of 2011- after which their prices went up.  What really happened here is that Sprint was getting the iphone in October 2011, so they decided that they did not need to be customer friendly anymore.  They killed a bunch of their customer friendly initiatives like the the Premier service for long term customers.  Their moves only alienated their loyal customer base.   Now with the ETFs being paid by T-Mobile, Sprint finds itself in a tough position, they lost the last possible shackle they had on their customer base.   The chart compares  Sprint Framily vs. TMobile Simple Plan

Sprint cost /line 1 GB of data 1.5c/MB overage Sprint Cost with Hotspot per Line,1 GB of Data 1.5c/MB overage T-Mobile Cost/ Line, Unlimited Data, Throttled after 0.5 GB, Free Hotspot, Free International Data
1 Line $55 $65 $50
2 Lines $50 $60 $40
3 $45 $55 $30
4 $40 $50 $25
5 $35 $45 $22
6 $30 $40 N/A
7- 10 $25 $35 N/A

A very small percentage may see a value in Sprint.  A family of 4 or 5 is better off on the T-Mobile plan  A hotspot allows you to kill the data plan on your tablet and use the data off your phone instead,   Sprint decided that they want to charge you for the hotspot/  You will have to pay 1.5c/MB if you go over the 1GB of data.  In my opinion, if you compare the value of the plans T-Mobile does comes way ahead.

However if we want compare in T-Mobile’s 2.5 Gig LTE data plan.  The results start looking even better

Sprint cost /Line 1 GB of data 1.5c/MB overage Sprint Cost with Hotspot /Line 1 GB of Data 1.5c/MB overage T-Mobile Cost/ Line, Unlimited Data, Throttled after 0.5 GB Free Hotspot T-Mobile Cost/Line,Unlimited Data, Throttled after 2.5GB, Free Hotspot, Free International Data
1 Line $55 $65 $50 $60
2 Lines $50 $60 $40 $50
3 $45 $55 $30 $40
4 $40 $50 $25 $35
5 $35 $45 $22 $32
6 $30 $40 N/A N/A
7- 10 $25 $35 N/A N/A

Right now on the Price war and value T-mobile is still way ahead.  I could add the Sprints 3 Gb and Unlimited plans to this chart but their prices will only go up from here.  Also keep in mind that T-Mobile gives free International Roaming.    You may not think that is relevant or important to you but I was in Jamaica a few years ago, my phone was on roaming for about 20 minutes  and it pulled in

“3819 KB Wireless Data Roaming – Haiti @ $.019/KB………………………………$72.56”.   (This is straight from my old Sprint Bill).

I don’t know why it says Haiti.  I know I was in Jamaica.  However, I have a feeling the most of that 3.7Mb of data was Siri trying to communicate with the mother ship.  This was really my fault,  the  Sprint employees warned me about International Data roaming telling me stories about how people came back and had a $10,000 roaming data bill and the reps could not do anything about it.

From my recent experience, I was out of the country on a Caribbean cruise and on the 4 port days, my 3 lines managed to pull in 95.8457 MB of data.  I paid Nada, Zilch to T-Mobile for that 95 odd MB of roaming data..  My sprint bill just on the data alone would have been a whooping $1864.77  (using their calculation of $.019/KB). The biggest offender on the roaming data was my teenage son, of Course!

With international data you can tweet, post facebook pictures while abroad and not pay T-Mobile anything extra.   But hey – the choice is still yours.

Cons of the Framily Plan and the effect on your Thanksgiving Dinner

Disclaimer:  I had to go through the FAQs and the very fine print to come up with my analysis.

To get the best prices on the Framily plan you will need help from your friends and relatives.  You will need to recruit your friends and family into signing up for Sprint, that may not be how they are advertising it but that is definitely the intent.  The Sprint rep on the phone told me to stop by the Sprint store and pick up brochures for my friends and family.  I had called Sprint for clarification, telling them I wanted to come back :).    Everything is setup so that the current customers recruit for sprint

From the FAQ

  1. There is no way to leave one framily to join another framily.  I could not find anything in the faq that said you could do that.  Once you leave a framily, I am guessing you get your own Framily ID.    (Recruit for savings)
  2. There is no way to merge 2 separate framilies.  (Recruit for savings) 
  3. “New customers on a new account have up to 14 days from account activation to join your Framily ID”. After 14 days they cannot join your framily.  They get their own framily id.  They now have to recruit and build their own Framily and you just lost your recruit

Unless you have a family of 7 or more you really need to analyze this plan.  You can play the scenarios  on how your families/friends  will be guilted into staying with the Framily plan and by extension with Sprint  so that everyone can “Enjoy” the savings.  It does not matter if a family of 4 wants to move to Verizon because they just cannot get any service from Sprint.  Slow data, dropped calls, texts not going through (there are plenty of complaints/examples on their facebook page).  Hell, If Aunt Becky moves all her 4 lines, it screws all of us because our Sprint bill will be higher.  Tell her she needs to Stay with Sprint for the good of the framily.   Shoot she moved her 4 lines, don’t invite her and her idiot husband for thanksgiving.   Let’s call cousin Matt and tell him to move from AT&T so that we can all save.  I never liked his wife and kids but I am willing to look the other way.  Also he is lazy so make sure, he signs up with our Framily id within 14 days or all those calls and being sweet to his wife, will be for nothing.

Sprint we have enough drama in our lives.  We really don’t need to add any more  Framas from Framily 🙂 .  You are sinking ship and your brilliant new plan requires me to recruit subscribers for Sprint and then hope and pray that they stay with Sprint – Not Happening.

All I can say is the people who are going into the framily plan – be aware of the potential potholes, read the fine print and gotchas.   Every  company has the fine print that ends up blowing in your face.  Telecom companies are some of the worst offenders of Advertising vs the fine print.  These are some of the ones I could catch.  Otherwise, it would make for very interesting misgivings, oops I meant Thanksgivings.