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(#1)
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Junior Member
Newbie
Posts: 9
Join Date: 31 Dec 2014
Country:
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![]() any review on the unlocked ZTE mf 96 (tmobile sonic 2.0 lte) mifi?
like would it work in asia countries and say maybe canada ? thanks |
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(#2)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 174
Join Date: 06 Jan 2005
Country:
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![]() I had the ZTE 86 mifi. I could not get it to connect at all to any of my mobile devices. I brought my brother-in -law over who is a software engineer , and he was unable to make it work. I sent it back to amazon.
Phones Gsm Iphone6+ |
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(#3)
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Junior Member
Newbie
Posts: 9
Join Date: 31 Dec 2014
Country:
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![]() i just got it but wasnt unlocked, it does not work with phone plan that is prepaid so far
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(#4)
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Junior Member
Newbie
Posts: 4
Join Date: 08 Mar 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Country:
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![]() Quote:
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(#5)
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Junior Member
Newbie
Posts: 4
Join Date: 08 Mar 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Country:
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![]() Theoretically a hot spot / cell phone which uses a removable SIM can only be locked by a carrier who registers the MEID address of the device to a paricular person / cell phone number. If someone buys (or steals) the device and replaces the removable SIM, they cannot activate it with the same carrier unless the carrier allows it, since the carrier has a database which says this MEID/MAC address belongs to someone else. That would not prevent someone from using the device on a compatible competing carrier - TMobile for AT&T, Sprint for Verizon. The four major carriers are not 100% compatible, so don't just assume you can use an AT&T cell phone on TMobile. But Straight Talk Wireless supports both AT&T and TMobile phones on a BYOD plan. I'm not sure whether the MEID database is shared by all carriers, it might be. But I'm pretty sure the rule is now, that if a phone # or MEID is not connected to a cell/data plan for over 30 days, the carriers "cross it out" and recycle the MEID and the phone #, since I've bought cell phones which "used to have someone else's number" and voice mail for the prior owner of the number. That also means that usually a device which is sold as used, if the account it was attached to wasn't deactivated, the MEID will become available to re-register 30 days after the plan was cancelled for non-payment, or immediately after the MEID is removed from the account and replaced the the new device's MEID. This is what carriers do when people upgrade their phones, they deactivate the old MEID and replace it with a new MEID on the same account....
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(#6)
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Junior Member
Newbie
Posts: 4
Join Date: 08 Mar 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Country:
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![]() When you buy a new or used device which requires a repaceable SIM, like the mf 96, if you buy it used you must buy a SIM card for it and replace the SIM, so you can register the device on your data plan with your carrier. If you buy it new, your carrier will generally install a new SIM and activate it for you on the account you used to buy it. If it's new, you just power it on, it's already activated. If it's used, you replace the SIM with the one you bought, install it according to the instructions which came with the SIM card your carrier sent with the SIM. Nowadays the carriers usually register and activate the SIM card before they ship it to you, so you just insert it and power it on like a new device. A couple years ago they'd give you instructions to call their tech support to activate it, but now it's pretty automatic. If you're having problems with activation - and either it's new, or you bought and replaced the SIM already, call the carrier's tech support...they're there to assist.
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(#7)
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Junior Member
Newbie
Posts: 4
Join Date: 08 Mar 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Country:
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![]() I just bought a used mf96 and a TMobile data plan. The device is a Tmobile device, although it also worked with US Cellular. Many people think LTE is LTE and don't know there are a dozen different LTE bands, classified as bands 1-x. Bands 1-4 are most popular..Verizon uses band 1, 1900. the mf 96 uses band 4, LTE AWS, 1800. Many countries outside the U.S. use another band at 2600. When in doubt, check with your preferred carrier if they support the device in the country where you intend to use it. If I travel abroad, I guess I'd have to go to London, since obviously Tmobile supports their home country.
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