(I'm writing this up here, mostly so it's got somewhere to live on in posterity.)
Background: I have a Verizon family plan for my wife and I. Two devices: one crappy featurephone, one Galaxy Nexus with the grandfathered unlimited 4G plan. My wife, who had spent years not wanting a smartphone, finally changed her mind. I'd been pondering a switch away from Verizon after they had mysteriously shut down TCP/IP connections where I was trying to move lots of photos from my laptop back to my home server (tunneling via ssh). Past 120MB or so, the connections would just die. This happened multiple times, in multiple cities, over multiple months. It was clearly some sort of throttling engineered into their system. "Unlimited" 4G, yeah right.
T-Mobile seemed attractive, so to see how good it was doing, I picked up a Nexus 7 (2013 LTE edition), which came with one month of free service. Side by side with my Galaxy Nexus, in several cities, the T-Mobile data service was blowing Verizon out of the water. Now, several months later, Verizon is finally admitting in public that they're having capacity issues. No shock there. (The Galaxy Nexus, when it was new and Verizon didn't have many customers with LTE, was a screamer, regularly getting 20Mb/s. Today I'm lucky if I get 4Mb/s.)
Unfortunately, my Verizon lock-in doesn't end until December 15, so after much research, the game plan became:
- Activate my wife's Nexus 5 with T-Mobile, having them port her number from the dumb featurephone. While I was there, I also bolted the Nexus 7 onto the "200MB free" plan, wherein they seem to charge me $10/month and credit me another $10/month. Yeah, go figure.
- Get my employee discount attached to my new T-Mobile account. This turns out to be a huge pain. With Verizon you show your employee ID, they punch the computer, and it's all done. With T-Mobile, there are web sites and emails and more, and now that it's all "confirmed" I still have to wait "up to two billing cycles" for it to kick in.
So far, it's all straightforward. I've now got a T-Mobile plan with my wife's old number attached, and my Galaxy Nexus is still attached to Verizon on a family plan without any family. An earlier phone call with Verizon Tech #1 suggested that the plan, moving forward, was to reactive the dumb featurephone, swap the phone numbers, then port away my phone number now that it's not attached to an account with a lock-in. When I called in today to follow this plan, Verizon Tech #2 ("I've been here 15 years and what you want to do isn't going to work") insisted that my grandfathered unlimited 4G plan was inseparably bolted onto my phone number, and any change would result in the loss of my unlimited 4G. (Cue Southpark kids: "You bastards!")
So, what's next? I'm following
a plan of action from Rootzwiki, posted May 28, and apparently still valid.
- I activated the other Nexus 5 with a fresh phone number, connected in a family plan with my wife's phone and my tablet.
- I called T-Mobile's "transfer center" (877-789-3106) and asked them to port my Verizon number onto the new phone.
- Minutes later, an SMS arrived on the Nexus 5 saying
Welcome to T-Mobile! ... Your phone number is and it had the Verizon number.
- I immediately logged into VerizonWireless.com and used their web feature to change my mobile number.
Confirmation. You now have a new mobile number. The change is effective today, November 17, 2013 ... Plan: Your plan details remains the same.
So that's at least promising. I then tried calling the old Verizon number from my home phone. "Welcome to Verizon Wireless", said the robot. My old number is now "changed, disconnected or no longer in service." Porting in progress. If I call the new mobile number that Verizon assigned to me, my Galaxy Nexus rings immediately.
Summary: The Rootzwiki method indeed appears to work. Hopefully, by tomorrow, the "port" will be complete and I'll be using my new phone on my new service and I can focus on ditching the Verizon account, wherein I need to find somebody who wants their "unlimited 4G" plan and is willing to do an "assumption of liability" from me to them. Apparently such things are going for $250-$280 on eBay. If any of you want it, let me know before I deal with the wild world of eBay lemmings.