eSIM, a digital SIM technology that allows you to connect to your operator without the need to use a physical SIM card, has been a technology supported by brands for a long time. Although many of the latest smartphones of the brands are eSIM compatible, the number of companies that fully use this technology is very few. The latest news shows that this situation will not last long and eSIM technology will become a part of our lives in the coming days.
We talked to you in the past days that Apple can make a big change in the new iPhone models and completely shelve our SIM cards. It was claimed that Apple would switch to eSIM technology and completely remove the SIM card slot from the new iPhone models. A similar news came from Android today, and it was claimed that Andorid will switch to eSIM technology with version 13, just like Apple news. Let’s take a look at what kind of technology will come to replace the SIM cards that are said to be out of our lives with Andorid 13.
Two operators can be connected with a single eSIM
Many of us do not want to deal with SIM card changes when we want to switch from one operator to another. You may remember a long time ago that our SIM cards were almost 3-4 times their current size. First, the sizes of our SIM cards shrank a little with new phone models and turned into Micro SIM cards, then they got smaller and became the Nano SIM cards that most of us use now. Now, new news shows that SIM cards will completely disappear from our lives in the coming days.
As we have just mentioned, there have been allegations that Apple plans to switch to eSIM technology recently. After these news, the news that Google will switch to eSIM technology with the Android 13 version soon came. In a blog post published by Mishaal Rahman, one of the senior technical editors at the Andorid developer platform Esper, it was claimed that eSIM technology will come with the Android 13 version. Share by Rahman According to the article, Android 13 users will be able to switch between personal and professional lines in their eSIM profiles and connect two operators to a single eSIM. However, this eSIM feature is not only exclusive to Android, but can also be used on Windows and iOS operating systems.
Google patented the MEP technology, which allows the use of multiple profiles, in 2020. In addition, the company’s new eSIM technology is thought to make a single interface much more useful by dividing it into different digital connections. Whatever happens, the probability of saying goodbye to SIM cards is increasing day by day. Maybe in a year or two we may see that none of the new phone models have a SIM card slot.