-t, it seems reasonable to think that the phone can be switched over to your account and retain both the stored information and even the same phone number, but only Verizon could tell you for sure.
'Dirty Girls'
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
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I like my Asus, Connie: [link]
Good battery life, travels well, fine for most web and .doc purposes. I wouldn't want to run Photoshop or Final Cut Pro on it, but I didn't buy it with that in mind.
Thanks, dcp. I'll take it down to my local Verizon kiosk and see what they say.
I wil hopefully be getting an iphone4 when I get back from Italy.
If you get any good pictures of food, let me know.
Suppose I have a Droid with Verizon service (provided by a corporate account that will expire on the 22nd). If I were to add a line to my already existent Verizon account, could I put this phone onto it and not lose all the old messages etc. that it had from the old number?
-t, ask them to do a change of financial responsibility. The corporation will have to release the account to you, so it will probably mean a conference call. You can then keep the phone as well, assuming of cours the company is amenable to this.
-t, if you still have the phone, and it's the actual voicemails (not, say, the "hi, this is bob, leave a message if you like carrots"), most carriers have an option to forward the message, I think. So even if corporate wouldn't let you keep the actual phone number...
Good options I hadn't thought of! Thanks!
Apple.com is now saying that pre-ordered iPhones will ship July 2nd. Guess enough other people got through yesterday while I was locked out!
[And bah humbug anyway - since the phones have to be shipped to my billing address and I don't trust my post office, I'll just have to take my chances in the store on the 24th.]
I have a brand new PC that I spent the better part of two days loading software into and configuring. As I was working on it, I realized I needed some settings from the old computer. I unplugged the monitor to attach to the old computer, did what I needed to do, then reattached the monitor. In the course of this, there was the normal amount of moving stuff around and cursing, because I already had the cords coiled up. In the process, I did turn the computer so the back was up, the better to get at connections requiring little tiny fingers. This is something I've done probably hundreds of times on other computers. When I plugged everything back into the computer, nothing works. It doesn't connect to the monitor; the USB ports aren't live. The On button has a light that's on, but the computer isn't making computer noises. I'm about to get into the tedious round of talking to the manufacturer (well known for dreadful customer service), the vendor and AmEx. Does anyone have any suggestions about something else I could try to bring it back to life?
Also, the best case scenario I can think of is that they swap it out for a new one, but now I have data on the hard drive that I really don't want to leave the house.