News

Apple has submitted a proposal to the European Telecoms Standards Body (ETSI) that would define a SIM card that's smaller even than the microSIM it uses in the iPhone 4 and iPad. Apple proposed ...
You can trim a standard SIM card down to fit these standards -- Sharon Vaknin of CNET offers a tutorial on how to do this -- but if you do it incorrectly, you damage the SIM card irreparably.
Instead of using standard SIM cards in its new iPad Air 2 and iPad mini 3, Apple has equipped both with a new " Apple SIM." ...
You place your standard SIM card into the designated slot, press down, and the tool precisely cuts the SIM card to the micro SIM size. This ensures that the cut is clean and accurate, preventing ...
Unlike the iPad Mini, which uses a nano SIM card, the standard iPad uses a slightly larger micro SIM card. The SIM card is locked to a particular cellular data provider, so if you switch carriers ...
The two largest handset makers in the world — Apple and Samsung — are said to be working with some of the largest carriers around the globe on a new, so-called "e-SIM" standard that would ...
Next week, two proposals for a new, smaller SIM card, dubbed nano-SIM–one backed by Apple and the other by Nokia, Research In Motion and Motorola Mobility–will go head to head as ETSI (the ...
Apple will not be developing a phone so small that the standard sim cannot fit. If they wanted to they could have made enough space on the iPhone 4, and for sure could have made space on the iPad.