I was wondering what will happen to iPhones when the original two-year contracts end? Will owners be able to move their phone to a different carrier, and what will the limitations be besides the lack of visual voicemail?
I was wondering what will happen to iPhones when the original two-year contracts end? Will owners be able to move their phone to a different carrier, and what will the limitations be besides the lack of visual voicemail?
I don't know about USA, but here in Australia you are eligible to unlock your phone (officially) after 6 months into the contract.
how and by who
how and by who
To add to what Chundles said, in addition to the three iPhone carriers here (Optus, Telstra and Vodafone) having to let you unlock after six months, Optus also gives you the option to buy the phone outright and pay an unlocking fee the moment you buy the phone. For example, where I live, Telstra is the only carrier. However, I prefer pre-paid phones over being on a contract, but Telstra only offers the iPhone on a contract with no option to buy it outright. So I can go to Optus, buy the 8GB iPhone for just over $800AU, pay about $100 to get it unlocked legitly, slide in my current SIM, connect it to iTunes and have a legally unlocked iPhone using a Telstra prepaid SIM that I own 100%.
All that's stopping me is I'm not stupid enough to pay over $900 for a phone and to get it unlocked when I can get an iPod touch, which is pretty much the iPhone without a camera or phone, for $550 - which also has 4 times as much memory as the aforementioned iPhone model.