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Art_C_
Network Novice
Joined 2 years ago
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Re: Unable to unlock Iphone 13 purchased from BB, contacted TMobile 4 Times!
fireguy_6364 wrote: Art C. wrote: I agree. You should get an android phone. you are the one that told him to consider an Android phone. Yes, I did tell him to consider an Android phone. T-Mobile is pretty awesome but the people on these forums seem to be a bit thick.4Visto0likes0ComentariosRe: Unable to unlock Iphone 13 purchased from BB, contacted TMobile 4 Times!
tomwil wrote: Art C. wrote: straeltje wrote: Fabricated lies, according to the original publisher "Fabricated" us a stretch. More like, forcibly redacted after substantial legal threats from Apple. (Fact check: true)4Visto0likes0ComentariosRe: Unable to unlock Iphone 13 purchased from BB, contacted TMobile 4 Times!
straeltje wrote: children are not involved by the manufacturing of android phones. Where did you get that idea? Most android phones are made in the same bunch of Chinese sweatshops that Apple uses. Hon Hai Precision Industries (aka Foxconn) does manufacturing for most of the major brands. If you can find an unredacted copy of "Mr. Daisey and the Apple Factory" he covers in detail the horrible working conditions under which iPhones are manufactured.7Visto0likes0ComentariosRe: NAT (Forwarding) in T-Mobile Gateway
EricNorcal wrote: No, it not possible to expose ports, even for IPv6 addresses, if you are using the gateway they gave me. I suppose that's possible. Maybe try a different gateway, like a MikroTik with your SIM card moved to it. Most providers are shy to let just any IPv6 inbound connection succeed, since that would create a pretty obvious security problem. By the way, if you want to open more than just a single port, I highly recommend Ace Innovative [https://www.aceinnovative.com/internet-access/static-ip-vpn/]. For $15/month you get an unrestricted IPv4 /29 and IPv6 /64 and they even send you the router.9Visto0likes0ComentariosRe: NAT (Forwarding) in T-Mobile Gateway
The T-Mobile network is working as designed. NAT464 is a transition strategy. Your phone, or your home Internet device, is assigned a public, globally routable, unique IPv6 address. It is better for everyone, everywhere, if we speed up the transition to IPv6. When you request an IPv4 site, your device does NAT46 and then carries the traffic to a NAT64 gateway operated by T-Mobile on the Internet edge. It works very, very well. The downside, of course, is that you do not have a globally routable IPv4 address on which you can expose ports. It is possible to expose ports, but of course only on your IPv6 address. This means that you would only be able to connect to it from IPv6 clients. For many applications this is an acceptable tradeoff. As the supply of IPv4 addresses continues to become more problematic, you should expect other providers to begin adopting this strategy as well.8Visto0likes0Comentarios