Screwing around with CDMA handsets is no fun at all. You’ve taken the SIM card out of the equation, so a hefty chunk of the data that defines whether or not you can connect is stored on the carrier’s server. As such, getting a phone like the Palm Pre onto Verizon is as much social engineering as it is technical hackery.
The above video shows the early results of an attempt at just that. The process is by no means for faint of heart: first you have to unlock the SPC, then you have to call and convince a Verizon rep to add your Pre’s MEID to your account. It’s not that VZW employees aren’t generally willing to add the MEID – it’s that they often have no damn clue how. Then there’s still a bit of modification to be done on the phone itself by way of some rather intense software. In the end, only voice and text are currently working, though they hope to have data cracked sometime soon.
[Via Giz]
Crunch Network: TechCrunch obsessively profiling and reviewing new Internet products and companies
Related News
Verizon and iSkoot make feature phones just a little bit smarter with Social Beat
Verizon to raise ETF to $350 on “advanced devices”
Video: Nokia N900 + SNES Emulator + PS3 Controller = Portable geek bliss
Verizon: You know who should buy a Pre Plus? Your mother.
Apple announces unlocked iPads with AT&T 3G support
Japanese company sells consolation money calculator
You can buy gold from a vending machine in Germany
Disney to ruin childhood memories by remaking Flight of the Navigator
Whoa, Sirius XM could file for bankruptcy ‘within days’
Standalone Guitar Hero World Tour instruments go on sale this Sunday
Shure announces new “DJ” headphones
Where were you when the Xbox 360 version of BioShock 2 leaked? (Because it just did, you see.)
Only the Nvidia 9400M works with Snow Leopard’s h.264 acceleration
AT&T may have fibbed regarding Sling player for iPhone