hey I'm Donnell Bell and in this video
we're gonna talk about cell phone
carriers how to choose one that's right
for you maybe you already have a carrier
that you like or maybe you're shopping
around
either way I'm here to give you a quick
education on what you need to know the
major carriers in the u.s. include AT&T
Verizon t-mobile and Sprint each of them
owns their own physical network the
towers satellites and cables that are
used to transmit your call around the
country there are also smaller carriers
out there like Virgin Mobile or Boost
Mobile but they actually lease their
network from the big guy so if you hate
the idea of a big telco getting your
money you'll just have to try messenger
pigeons or postcards so yeah the four
major networks two of them Verizon and
Sprint use a cellular standard called
CDMA the other two 18t and t-mobile use
a standard called GSM you can think of
this like Diesel versus gasoline both of
them get the job done but you can't run
a diesel car on regular gas the same
goes for phones
you can't take a CDMA phone that you
bought on Sprint and go use on 18 t's
GSM network or vice versa there are a
few phones like the iPhone or some of
the more popular Android smartphones
that every carrier has a version of but
if you want to avoid some heartbreak it
can be helpful to choose a carrier
before you shop around for that perfect
phone but the most important thing you
should consider when choosing a carrier
is what kind of reception are gonna get
in your area like I said each carrier
has the own unique network so the
coverage varies between each one
check out the carrier's coverage map to
make sure you're gonna have reception
where you're likely to use your phone
for more cell phone buying advice
including how to pick the right phone
and how to understand your cell phone
plan check out the other videos in the
CNET buying guide for cnet.com I'm tom
you
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