Following the link in the article, I downloaded p2ktools. Editing is rather easy, not even typical hex edit. Finding the right byte/bit to change is the hard part. I suggest you save the SEEM data to file before editing. The program provide a way to read/write from phone or file. With that saved, you can experiment and restore easily..
My daughter just attended summer camp where smart phones and music players are not allowed. I am glad I got her a Razr as phone and an iTouch rather than an iPhone. Her Razr was fine, so she was able to call in before bed time every night as she was supposed to.
Even for adults, I have attended two events where smart phones, pda's, ipod, music players are not allowed. There was at the gate an "electronic check". First day, I was caught off guard. Second day, I brought along my cheap phone and just pull the SIM before I checked in my electronics. Now that I revived my Razr, that would serve such purpose nicely.
My wife just killed her V3C, but I got a lightly used one on Ebay for $30, transferred all her stuff to the new one and she's good to go.
Verizon did not want to do the ESN swap, CSR told me I needed to get a new "Verizon" phone. I told her to stuff it and went and did the ESN switch online and all is well.
We have a dumbphone on our ghost line that is what amounts to the Moto generic version of the RAZR, I forget the actual model number of it but it is a great backup and we use it as a house phone on top of the mantle as my wife is notorious for leaving her Droid in various rooms where she can't hear it in the living room lol.
As for me, I was a rebel and got a SLVR. Yes, the SLVR was the RAZR but without being a flip phone and I had it on AT&T (so glad I dropped those asshats). I beat the everliving hell out of that phone, dropped it numerous times... I had friends with RAZRs that went through 3 or 4 phones in a contract period from broken hinges or wires in the hinges and my SLVR was still working great. Best dumbphone I ever had and I really should have bought one on ebay when I switched to the big red machine instead of the junk dumbphones they had in stores.
The best thing about the SLVR, the very best thing, is that it could fit in that 5th pocket in your blue jeans that is right over top of the main right front pocket. It fit like it was designed for it really. Screw you iPod nano, I had a SLVR with iTunes on it back in 2006!
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