the
>>>> phone was on Wifi calling, the watch would simply not ring at all. If I
>>>> was away and the phone was on cellular, the watch did ring. Now that
>>>> Sprint enabled this feature, it works on both. I thought this phone
>>>> calling through
ring. Now that Sprint
>>> enabled this feature, it works on both. I thought this phone calling
>>> through the watch was over bluetooth, but I guess it is a direct connection
>>> to the carrier you have.
>>>
>>> - Original Message - From: "Scott Granados&q
Hi Scott,
Nearly. The watch and phone will use Bluetooth if available. If Bluetooth is
off or unavailable, the watch uses any existing association to reach the phone
over Wi-Fi. Finally, if the phone itself is off and can’t be reached by any
method, then the watch will do some things indepen
some free extra service
to my Sprint account that blessed the watch with incoming call abilities.
- Original Message -
From: "Scott Granados"
To:
Sent: Tuesday, December 29, 2015 1:11 PM
Subject: Re: wifi calling on Apple Watch
So here’s how that works. The interface
I thought this phone calling through the
> watch was over bluetooth, but I guess it is a direct connection to the
> carrier you have.
>
> - Original Message - From: "Scott Granados"
> To:
> Sent: Monday, December 28, 2015 10:25 AM
> Subject: Re: wifi calling on
orks on both. I thought this phone calling through
>> the watch was over bluetooth, but I guess it is a direct connection to the
>> carrier you have.
>>
>> - Original Message - From: "Scott Granados"
>> To:
>> Sent: Monday, December 28, 2015 10:25
ture, it works on both. I thought this phone calling through the
> watch was over bluetooth, but I guess it is a direct connection to the
> carrier you have.
>
> - Original Message - From: "Scott Granados"
> To:
> Sent: Monday, December 28, 2015 10:25 AM
>
enabled this feature, it works on both. I thought this phone calling through
the watch was over bluetooth, but I guess it is a direct connection to the
carrier you have.
- Original Message -
From: "Scott Granados"
To:
Sent: Monday, December 28, 2015 10:25 AM
Subject
So I’m seeing the lack of watch listed under other devices as well, I just
tried this.
I am not in range of a WiFi network that the watch could join though. When I
get home this evening I will give t his a more detailed try and see if I see
something different. I’m thinking I may have the sam
So, I turned on wifi calling on my iPhone, and have enabled other devices to
use wifi calling. In the watch app, I have wifi calling enabled as well. So I
turn off my phone, and attempt to make a call via my watch. The call fails
every time. Same when making a call to my cell number. my iPad ri
Yes and Yes. All I did was sync he watch and everything seemed to work. I’m
able to place and receive calls. What have you tried and what issue / symptoms
do you see with the watch?
> On Dec 28, 2015, at 11:09 AM, Ricardo Walker wrote:
>
> Hello everyone,
>
> I’m trying to get wifi calli
OK yes, fair point, if you have the base station analog at the site then you
get most of the benefit, but I think the reason why carriers love Wi-Fi calling
so much is precisely that customers can use it absolutely anywhere there’s
Internet. And let’s face it, asking customers to purchase and in
Actually T-Mobile gives you unlimited voice, they don’t care what network it
runs over and it’s all native SIP, so we’re almost there.:)
That being said, you actually can switch from WiFi to 1X or voice over EVDO as
well as from WiFi to HSPA+ it just requires different configurations and
equipm
Indeed; no way to switch from packet-switched voice on Wi-Fi to non-VOLTE
circuit-switched delivery. Just another reason not to use Wi-Fi calling if
your carrier doesn’t have LTE yet. Even when it does, I’d be reluctant to use
it unless they subsidised the cost of my calls while I was using Wi
Mary, with T-Mobile ideally you’ll have VOLTE on. You go on an iPhone to
cellular and make sure that volte says voice and data.
> On Oct 26, 2015, at 9:16 AM, Mary Otten wrote:
>
> OK Scott, thank you for the clarification. Regarding voice over LTE, it must
> be on by default. I've never seen
nados"
> To:
> Cc:
> Sent: Monday, October 26, 2015 7:23 AM
> Subject: Re: Wifi calling
>
>
> Mary, turn it on and leave it on, it’s a great feature.
>
> To answer your questions. WiFi calling will always be preferred when enabled
> on an iPhone.
> If you’re O
OK Scott, thank you for the clarification. Regarding voice over LTE, it must be
on by default. I've never seen anywhere to turn it on or off. This is on a
T-Mobile phone.
Mary
Sent from my iPad
> On Oct 26, 2015, at 5:23 AM, Scott Granados wrote:
>
> Mary, turn it on and leave it on, it’s a
just in case.
- Original Message -
From: "Scott Granados"
To:
Sent: Monday, October 26, 2015 7:25 AM
Subject: Re: Wifi calling
Yes, Both T-Mobile and Sprint default to WiFi when connected.
On Oct 24, 2015, at 5:12 PM, Jonathan C. Cohn
wrote:
For Sprint WiFi call
om: "Scott Granados"
To:
Cc:
Sent: Monday, October 26, 2015 7:23 AM
Subject: Re: Wifi calling
Mary, turn it on and leave it on, it’s a great feature.
To answer your questions. WiFi calling will always be preferred when
enabled on an iPhone.
If you’re On the Wifi and on a call the c
Your mobile operator has to support the feature.
> On Oct 26, 2015, at 6:09 AM, Anders Holmberg wrote:
>
> Hi!
> Is this something all can use regardless of mobiele operators?
> Or is this something new only in the US.
> /A
>> On 24 Oct 2015, at 05:02, Mary Otten wrote:
>>
>> Thanks, Daniel. I
Yes, Both T-Mobile and Sprint default to WiFi when connected.
> On Oct 24, 2015, at 5:12 PM, Jonathan C. Cohn wrote:
>
> For Sprint WiFi calling the service provider name changes. Also Sprint WiFi
> is always on in my house even though I have good signals in most of it.
>
>
> Jonathan Cohn
Mary it transitions back and forth on it’s own, no need to worry. It will
switch back and forth from VOLTE to WiFi with out you needing to do anything.
> On Oct 23, 2015, at 11:02 PM, Mary Otten wrote:
>
> Thanks, Daniel. I did find the Apple support earticle to which you referred.
> That ha
Mary, turn it on and leave it on, it’s a great feature.
To answer your questions. WiFi calling will always be preferred when enabled
on an iPhone.
If you’re On the Wifi and on a call the call routes over your home or
WiFi network, over the internet to an aggregation point on your provid
i-fi calling is carrier dependent. Check with your carrier to see if they
support it.
> On Oct 26, 2015, at 5:09 AM, Anders Holmberg wrote:
>
> Hi!
> Is this something all can use regardless of mobiele operators?
> Or is this something new only in the US.
> /A
>> On 24 Oct 2015, at 05:02, Mary
Hi!
Is this something all can use regardless of mobiele operators?
Or is this something new only in the US.
/A
> On 24 Oct 2015, at 05:02, Mary Otten wrote:
>
> Thanks, Daniel. I did find the Apple support earticle to which you referred.
> That had not come up when I simply googled Wi-Fi calling
The service name changes for wifi calling regardless of carrier.
> On Oct 24, 2015, at 4:12 PM, Jonathan C. Cohn wrote:
>
> For Sprint WiFi calling the service provider name changes. Also Sprint WiFi
> is always on in my house even though I have good signals in most of it.
>
>
> Jonathan Cohn
For Sprint WiFi calling the service provider name changes. Also Sprint WiFi is
always on in my house even though I have good signals in most of it.
Jonathan Cohn
> On Oct 23, 2015, at 11:27 PM, Daniel Miller wrote:
>
> You can leave it on at all times. It only uses wifi for devices that don
OK, thanks for the clarification. One more reason I'm glad I switched to
T-Mobile.
Mary
Sent from my iPad
> On Oct 23, 2015, at 8:27 PM, Daniel Miller wrote:
>
> You can leave it on at all times. It only uses wifi for devices that don’t
> have a cellular connection, or when your connection g
You can leave it on at all times. It only uses wifi for devices that don’t have
a cellular connection, or when your connection gets weak on the phone.
> On Oct 23, 2015, at 10:02 PM, Mary Otten wrote:
>
> Thanks, Daniel. I did find the Apple support earticle to which you referred.
> That had n
Thanks, Daniel. I did find the Apple support earticle to which you referred.
That had not come up when I simply googled Wi-Fi calling. But I am still not
sure whether or not I'm going to have a problem if I have Wi-Fi calling turned
on and I'm out around town in a place where I do have a cell co
Hi Mary,
If you have t-mobile or sprint, you can use what’s called enhanced wi-fi
calling, which allows other iPads, iPods or Macs to make and receive wifi
calls, the same way your phone does. However, the really awesome advantage to
this is you can leave your phone at home, or somewhere else e
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