Ichinisan
Lifer
Be careful if you're upgrading your iPhone on AT&T. Actually, I'm not sure if being careful will help. I'm told there's nothing I could have done to keep my voicemail messages.
I bought an iPhone 5S from my brother's coworker. The guy is switching to T-Mobile and I guess he doesn't care about his credit...
I swapped the SIM from my iPhone 5 16GB to the iPhone 5s 64GB. I did a full, encrypted backup of the old phone in iTunes. I restored that backup to my new phone.
Many hours later, I finally tried to use voicemail. I saw my messages listed for a split second, but then my phone called a number as if visual voicemail hadn't been activated. I've had this problem when switching phones before, and it just takes a while before the phone prompts for the voicemail PIN so it can update visual voicemail automatically. I let it call the number again and tried to set a custom greeting. I heard a greeting that my brother made while messing with my phone years ago. It accidentally saved a custom greeting that I wanted to re-record, so I hung up and tried to call again. When I tapped "voicemail" this time, it still didn't show my visual voicemail messages and it didn't call a number automatically. Instead, it showed an error message and said to call my provider (AT&T).
When it called the number, it said "Calling Voicemail..." -- but it didn't say "voicemail" in my call history. It showed a local phone number instead.
I tapped that to call the number and heard the same prompts. At some point during the call, the pop-up appeared for me to enter the PIN for VVM (so I did). I finished setting my custom greeting through the call.
When I returned to the voicemail screen, all messages were gone.
I've gotten conflicting information from AT&T, but they keep trying to convince me that it's normal and that there's no way to keep the voicemail when I switch phones. When I called them yesterday, the first person I spoke to reset something. I think it changed some kind of ID on my account, because my messages are gone when I put my SIM back into my old phone. The second person said that the first person kinda screwed up by not telling me that it would reset all my voicemails (or something like that).
I bought an iPhone 5S from my brother's coworker. The guy is switching to T-Mobile and I guess he doesn't care about his credit...
I swapped the SIM from my iPhone 5 16GB to the iPhone 5s 64GB. I did a full, encrypted backup of the old phone in iTunes. I restored that backup to my new phone.
Many hours later, I finally tried to use voicemail. I saw my messages listed for a split second, but then my phone called a number as if visual voicemail hadn't been activated. I've had this problem when switching phones before, and it just takes a while before the phone prompts for the voicemail PIN so it can update visual voicemail automatically. I let it call the number again and tried to set a custom greeting. I heard a greeting that my brother made while messing with my phone years ago. It accidentally saved a custom greeting that I wanted to re-record, so I hung up and tried to call again. When I tapped "voicemail" this time, it still didn't show my visual voicemail messages and it didn't call a number automatically. Instead, it showed an error message and said to call my provider (AT&T).
When it called the number, it said "Calling Voicemail..." -- but it didn't say "voicemail" in my call history. It showed a local phone number instead.
I tapped that to call the number and heard the same prompts. At some point during the call, the pop-up appeared for me to enter the PIN for VVM (so I did). I finished setting my custom greeting through the call.
When I returned to the voicemail screen, all messages were gone.
I've gotten conflicting information from AT&T, but they keep trying to convince me that it's normal and that there's no way to keep the voicemail when I switch phones. When I called them yesterday, the first person I spoke to reset something. I think it changed some kind of ID on my account, because my messages are gone when I put my SIM back into my old phone. The second person said that the first person kinda screwed up by not telling me that it would reset all my voicemails (or something like that).