Shortly after Apple announced the iPhone 5 on stage last Wednesday, we confirmed the company chose to go with the nano-SIM card as its new standard to support LTE. We got a closer look this evening at the first official nano-SIM card from the world’s biggest iPhone carrier, AT&T. You will see the 76mm of plastic above—which you will surely become familiar with over the next few days. As you can see, the nano-SIM looks roughly 40 percent smaller than the micro-SIM that first debuted on the iPad 3G.
We got a look at another U.S. carrier last week, T-Mobile’s nano-SIM. T-Mobile launched an aggressive campaign trying to persuade unlocked iPhone customers to come over to its Magenta network for “big savings.” For those across the pond, we also got a look last week at Vodafone’s nano-SIM offering.
For those who do not want to contact their carrier to pick up a nano-SIM card, CNET Asia explained this afternoon the tedious process of cutting down a micro-SIM to nano-SIM standards. It is certainly nothing like cutting SIM to micro-SIM, as sanding is required to get the card down to the proper thickness. CNET explained:
On a related note: CNN posted a great graph showing where the iPhone will have 4G LTE coverage in the U.S.
As of now, this micro-SIM’s length and width has not been cut down to become a nano-SIM, simply because there’s no iPhone 5 to test it with. I will finish the job and test it out once Apple’s smartphone is available later this week.
Now we just need a look at Verizon’s nano-SIM card. (Sprint LTE somehow skirts the need for one.)
PhoneDog got a look at the front of the packaging a few hours ago:
- Report: European carriers placing nano-SIM orders in anticipation of next-gen iPhone launch (9to5mac.com)
- Nano SIMs begin arriving at telcos ahead of new iPhone launch (9to5mac.com)
- Vodafone nano-SIMs in stock ahead of tomorrow’s iPhone launch (9to5mac.com)
- This is what the new iPhone’s Nano SIM tray looks like (9to5mac.com)
- More alleged iPhone 5 parts leak out of China, shows new nano-SIM card once again (9to5mac.com)