Wed May 2, 2007 12:25PM EDT
See Comments (296)
Confused by the alphabet soup of cell phone acronyms? I don't blame you. Here's a cheat sheet that'll help you navigate the waters while your shopping for your next phone—or trying to get the most out of the handset you've got.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
I don't understand any of the crap I just read. What're you talking about? Who in the world would have an actual interest in this crap. I have to go I only have 2,817 characters left.
whats the little G icon that shows up on your phone with cingular!?! I don't know what it means and it's really annoying!!!
When Altell bought First Cellular in the midwest, I had to retire my V505 2G GSM phone (which I loved) for a 3G CDMA KRZR (which sucks). Now I understand. NOT!
Thank you! I work cell phone tech support, so I try to explain this to callers, but the terminology is the real stumbling block. some more to add: ESN (electronic Serial Number) or IMSI: Think the identifier for the phone. Like fingerprints, each one's unique. This is how cell towers know to ring to YOUR phone when someone calls your number. MIN (Mobile identity number): When people began "porting" their numbers from one carrier to another, the MIN was introduced so that the system knows the number belongs to it. If you've ported your number to another carrier, your new MIN will NOT be the same as your phone number. If you've never taken your phone from one carrier to another, your MIN will be the same as your phone number most, BUT NOT ALL, of the time. MDN (Mobile Directory number): Fancy way of saying "Your phone number" SID (System ID): About the size of an area code in most places, it's what's programmed in the phone to identify a certain area as "home." Phones, if they pick up something OTHER then the SID programmed into them will show "Roaming." If you are roaming in your home area, PLEASE let your cartier know. If you cross state lines or area code lines, check the coverage. You may be roaming on a SID covered by your plan (meaning it won't charge you). WAP - Wireless Access Protocol, or how your phone connects to the internet. It's more limited currently then the standard http protocol, so pages on your phone will not display the same way they do on your home deck. E911 - Enhanced 911 is the reason you can't dig out your old brick phone from 1999 and slap it on your account. Every phone that your carrier activates has to have a GPS chip in it that allows 911 to find you if you call 911.
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1 Posted by jfphx on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:34PM EDT Report Abuse
Brn Well put document. Thanks for the 20,000 foot level explanation. I understood a little about GSM and CDMA, but not enough to be intelligent. Well put, thanks.