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the thing is, your carrier knows you are on a ppc/blackberry just by your esn number.
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The three most dangerous things in the world are a programmer with a soldering iron, a hardware type with a software patch and a user with an idea
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Yeah, i have often wondered the same thing and i was thinking that BREW would be a whole lot better than the 40 dollar plan, but they always say the phone isnt BREW capable, which is crap because this phone is capable of everything and a whole lot more compared to those clamshells. Let me know if there is anything i can do to assist your "investigation"
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1. Read the FAQs, Stickies, Wiki
2. Do a SEARCH! 3. Be Very Specific 4. Give THANKS to those who deserve it! |
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The browser itself is irrelevant, all that matters is the plan. You are getting the same data on a VCAST phone as you are with an XV6700 on the unlimited data plan for $45. Your carrier figures you're going to use the internet more with IE and a big screen and keyboard, so they charge you more. It's just discriminating. Unless you can trick a retarded CS agent to give you an MOU data plan, your only option is to change your esn. It's not difficult, just illegal. It works well if you have a clamshell you know you won't use, just use that esn. And I didn't tell you to do it. :]
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You can use EPST to check your default username/password on the page named "M.IP settings". If you change the option to "Simple IP only" it will use the username/password you've specified in the connection settings. Here in PR China, the carrier uses "BREW/BREW" with brew and "CARD/CARD" for internet access. And there's an "SMTP/SMTP" for push mail. Anyway, brew stands for "binary runtime environment" which is designed by quallcom for their MSM processors (arm core?? no idea). Thus I've no idea if it can only be implemented on other cpus. But I guess it is not that simple to do that. |
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Yeah, W0rdie, I'm sorry, but it does indeed dial #777. The phone provider assumes you don't need to know this, because it's technically not costing you anything but minutes. I don't know about the vzw interface, because it sucks, but on all of my motorolas, when data is being used, I get a little data indicator at the top; it has connected via #777.
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