Hello All,

I just updated the carrier settings for several of my friends and thought
that some of you may want to know why such updates are required/requested.

The following article discusses carrier updates, the link to which may be
found at the end of the text.

Enjoy,

Mark 

What's a 'carrier update' for iPhone or iPad and why do we get them?
By Allyson Kazmucha, Thursday, Apr 3, 2014

If you've had an iPhone or iPad with cellular networking for any length of
time you've probably been notified about a carrier update. Some are
mandatory and don't give you an option to say refuse or to be reminded
later. Others just bug you occasionally until you actually perform the
update. But why? What are they, what do they contain, and what do they want
from us?

Carrier updates are used to help your iPhone and iPad communicate with the
carrier network. These files typically contain information concerning voice
networks, cellular data, voicemail settings, personal hotspot, and any other
service your carrier provides. For example, with the recent AT&T visual
voicemail issues on iOS 7, the only way for it to be fixed is through a
carrier update, since it's part that makes iOS and your chosen network play
nicely together.

This is why people that frequently switch between carriers by swapping SIM
cards may receive carrier updates more often than people who keep their SIM
card in just one iPhone. For example, if you travel and your iPhone 5s is
unlocked, you can simply replace your AT&T SIM with a 3 UK SIM or any other
international sim card you'd like. More often than not, the international
carrier will push an update to your iPhone so it talks to the network
better.

You can also check manually if you like by going to Settings > General > and
About. When you swap SIMs you can almost always trigger a carrier update to
appear this way. It's something I highly recommend doing when switching
between carriers, especially when it's a carrier in a foreign country. The
About section of your iPhone should also show your current carrier
information as well, should you ever have to reference it.

If you ever experience issues with your network or you aren't getting the
level of service as you think you should, it may be a good idea to repeat
the steps above and see if a carrier update is available. Keep in mind
though that carrier updates are only available for networks that Apple
officially supports. If a specific carrier doesn't support the iPhone or
cellular capable iPad in question, a carrier update would not be available.
In that case, information such as MMS (picture messaging) settings and
voicemail settings would need to be entered manually. This is a perfect
example of the data a carrier update takes care of for you.

Next time you have an issue with your wireless service and the support rep
asks you to read off your carrier settings information, you'll now know why
they ask for that. Sometimes, being sure you're on the most recent version
can solve lots of common problems such as picture messaging failures and
visual voicemail issues.

http://www.imore.com/whats-carrier-update-iphone-ipad-why-get-them


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