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reverserdev | 2 months ago
I learned from this experience that maybe eSIM is a good idea and I switched immediately upon hearing this person's story. Did I miss something?
reverserdev | 2 months ago
I learned from this experience that maybe eSIM is a good idea and I switched immediately upon hearing this person's story. Did I miss something?
skylurk|2 months ago
So changing phones can be done without any customer support or web forms or calls to service provider etc.
Actually, every phone I ever had eventually got replaced this way, I am still using the original sim card from years ago.
reverserdev|2 months ago
throw4fr5yy|2 months ago
As another anecdotal data point, I was able to switch phones internationally using a physical SIM by just putting it in the new phone.
throw-the-towel|2 months ago
Except many carriers have you jump through hoops to activate an eSIM on a new device. Here in the comments one person has to receive a new QR over snail mail.
reverserdev|2 months ago
For me it was 10 mins through my provider's app (and I was also doing it internationally)
eesmith|2 months ago
Neither SIM nor eSIM would have helped.
In that case, I waited to get home (I didn't live in Illinois) and got a new SIM by mail.
jech|2 months ago
Are you sure that his carrier allows activating an eSIM while roaming? Mine definitely doesn't, which means that if I break my phone while abroad, I lose access to online banking.