L Laidbackal macrumors regular Original poster May 25, 2012 #1 It's located in setting under network then you click on roaming it is called international CDMA it has always been turned on my iPhone 4s and I'm not sure what it is and if I should turn it off I live in the us not internationally.
It's located in setting under network then you click on roaming it is called international CDMA it has always been turned on my iPhone 4s and I'm not sure what it is and if I should turn it off I live in the us not internationally.
L Laidbackal macrumors regular Original poster May 25, 2012 #3 U dont know the answer to the question so face palm to u I was asking if it should be left on or turned off that is all.
U dont know the answer to the question so face palm to u I was asking if it should be left on or turned off that is all.
dontwalkhand macrumors 604 May 25, 2012 #5 Simple, On allows you to use your phone from outside the United States, Off will not allow you to use your phone from outside the United States. If you aren't going anywhere with the phone, leaving it on or off will do nothing to your service. Its just another slider you can play with.
Simple, On allows you to use your phone from outside the United States, Off will not allow you to use your phone from outside the United States. If you aren't going anywhere with the phone, leaving it on or off will do nothing to your service. Its just another slider you can play with.
PNutts macrumors 601 May 25, 2012 #7 Laidbackal said: U dont know the answer to the question so face palm to u I was asking if it should be left on or turned off that is all. Click to expand... Well played, sir. 😉
Laidbackal said: U dont know the answer to the question so face palm to u I was asking if it should be left on or turned off that is all. Click to expand... Well played, sir. 😉
L Laidbackal macrumors regular Original poster May 25, 2012 #8 Thanks p and dont nice people on here.
R RoboCop001 macrumors 68000 May 25, 2012 #9 dontwalkhand said: Simple, On allows you to use your phone from outside the United States, Off will not allow you to use your phone from outside the United States. If you aren't going anywhere with the phone, leaving it on or off will do nothing to your service. Its just another slider you can play with. Click to expand... Thanks for proving there's real, friendly people on here. 🙂 armadillo said: http://www.google.com/search?q=international+CDMA Click to expand... Globug said: 😱 is this for real? 😕 Really?!? /facepalm Click to expand... As for you two... not cool.
dontwalkhand said: Simple, On allows you to use your phone from outside the United States, Off will not allow you to use your phone from outside the United States. If you aren't going anywhere with the phone, leaving it on or off will do nothing to your service. Its just another slider you can play with. Click to expand... Thanks for proving there's real, friendly people on here. 🙂 armadillo said: http://www.google.com/search?q=international+CDMA Click to expand... Globug said: 😱 is this for real? 😕 Really?!? /facepalm Click to expand... As for you two... not cool.
kdarling Contributor May 25, 2012 #10 A good reason to leave it off, might be if you lived in the USA near the Mexican or Canadian borders Reportedly, people's phones will sometimes jump to a cell in the neighboring country, and get charged for international rates.
A good reason to leave it off, might be if you lived in the USA near the Mexican or Canadian borders Reportedly, people's phones will sometimes jump to a cell in the neighboring country, and get charged for international rates.
mikeydeezy macrumors 6502a May 25, 2012 #11 kdarling said: A good reason to leave it off, might be if you lived in the USA near the Mexican or Canadian borders Reportedly, people's phones will sometimes jump to a cell in the neighboring country, and get charged for international rates. Click to expand... And gee I bet the carriers hate when that happens. 🙄
kdarling said: A good reason to leave it off, might be if you lived in the USA near the Mexican or Canadian borders Reportedly, people's phones will sometimes jump to a cell in the neighboring country, and get charged for international rates. Click to expand... And gee I bet the carriers hate when that happens. 🙄