A:AnswerDo you mean cellular? It means it can connect to supported cell phone carriers (Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Spring) for LTE data. This includes the ability to make calls on the watch without a iPhone present. $10 a month is added to you cellular bill (not sure about Sprint).
A:AnswerYes. I bought one for a gift and didn’t activate it; you actually don’t need to activate it at all if you don’t want to, or you can activate it at a later time.
A:AnswerIt depends on who boost mobile runs their service through. If they are piggy backing off of AT&T then possibly yes. Call the boost mobile customer service or AT&T and ask for a definite answer
A:AnswerI wondered the same thing about the Dominican Republic so I just called the carrier directly. The answer was no but I got an answer to my question nonetheless.
A:AnswerIf your not goin to connect it your watch with your company it would have to be in a good few feet away from the phone to be able to work. Depending on your phone service how much they charge to hook up the watch to your service.
A:AnswerYes. It looks deep into your dreams and sends you advertisements based on what you dreamt of.
Only kidding, it monitors your heart rate during sleep.
A:AnswerThe purpose of the watch's phone number is so that the phone company can distinguish between devices. They link your cell phone's number with your watch's number in order for them to forward calls to your watch. If it did not have it's own number there would be no way for the phone company to forward the call to your watch. The would end up forwarding it straight back to your cell phone.
A:AnswerYes it still works. You can connect to your iPhone via Bluetooth. You just need to be near your iPhone. But if you don’t plan on getting cellular service on it; you might as well get the non cellular version and it’s less expensive.