It just means that they'll allow devices with ESN's that they didn't sell to be added to their network.
Personally, I'm not just "not a verizon fan", I'm an anti-verizon fan... so this isn't directly important to me. The way it will matter to me is the effect it will have on the market. Sprint is already on its way to opening up its network (wasn't there a settlement a few weeks back?). So, two of the big 4 US carriers are now opening up to some extent.
How will this pressure the small CDMA carriers (especially MetroPCS)? How will this pressure the GSM carriers here (T-Mobile and AT&T being the big two)? If MetroPCS, T-Mobile, and AT&T become more open, then that's "all good" from my perspective.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
john @ Nov 27th 2007 10:39AM
It just means that they'll allow devices with ESN's that they didn't sell to be added to their network.
Personally, I'm not just "not a verizon fan", I'm an anti-verizon fan... so this isn't directly important to me. The way it will matter to me is the effect it will have on the market. Sprint is already on its way to opening up its network (wasn't there a settlement a few weeks back?). So, two of the big 4 US carriers are now opening up to some extent.
How will this pressure the small CDMA carriers (especially MetroPCS)? How will this pressure the GSM carriers here (T-Mobile and AT&T being the big two)? If MetroPCS, T-Mobile, and AT&T become more open, then that's "all good" from my perspective.