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![]() "DhiaDuit" wrote in message ... Don't ask me, I don't know. Looka here ilk, back around 1996 1997 I bought an Ericsson cell phone at the AT@T retail store. I was on the AT@T cell phone plan for two years, about $18.00 each month of those two years. I wonder if I ever decide to get on a cell phone plan again, can I use my old Ericsson cell phone? The old battery won't take a charge anymore but I have a cell phone battery case that is made for that particular cell phone, I bought it at Walmart wayyy back then, it snaps on to the cell phone, just like the original battery that came with the cell phone, it uses AAA batteries, I have Eveready rechargable batteries and Eveready battery recharger. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- No, you won't be able to use that phone. The bands and modulation types are no longer supported. Your Ericsson would be an analog phone. AFAIK, there are no longer any analog cell towers left. From the Washington Post, Feb. 2008: Most Analog Cellular to Fade Away Next Week February 15, 2008 You may think of sunsets as something nice to look at, but if you have an older cell phone or a home alarm system, there's one coming up on Monday that may not be so pretty. That day, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission will let mobile operators shut down their analog networks. It's called the "analog sunset" because those AMPS (Advanced Mobile Phone System) networks, which were first deployed in the 1980s and brought cellular service to millions of Americans, will finally disappear behind the digital networks that serve almost all mobile phones in use today. The biggest U.S. mobile operators, AT&T Wireless and Verizon Wireless, will close down their analog networks that day. At the same time, AT&T will turn off its first digital network, which uses TDMA (Time-Division Multiple Access) technology. (Sprint Nextel and T-Mobile USA don't have analog networks.) Calls to some small, rural mobile operators indicated that most of them plan to shut down AMPS, too. |
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