Wednesday, March 21, 2012

i want to buy a nokia n75 would it work in England

i want to buy a nokia n75 would it work in England ?
are they any good,whats your opinion on them please
Cell Phones & Plans - 3 Answers
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1 :
Yes, the N75 will work in England. The phone is a quad band GSM and a dual-band UMTS model so it will not have any issues working in the UK, but it will likely not work on the UTMS network (meaning you will not get highs peed data access). The catch is that you must make sure that the phone you buy is not SIM locked to a particular carrier (AT&T, aka Cingular for this model). As for the phone itself, it is an excellent handset. If you don't care about a QWERTY keyboard it should have just about everything you need (nice camera, good music capabilities, great screen, etc...) I hope that answers your question.
2 :
Nokias are excellent phones. And yes they will work in england.
3 :
Yes it wud, but the charger wont...

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Will a Wii console bought in Australia work in England

Will a Wii console bought in Australia work in England?
I am sending a Wii Console and Wii Fit as a present, will this work in England if I have bought it in Australia
Nintendo Wii - 4 Answers
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1 :
It will probably work in that it will turn on and could be used to play the copy of Wii Fit you also sent, but I doubt that any games bought in the UK will work on a AUS-based Wii, so in that respect, the short answer would be No. I don't know for certain, but I'm pretty sure that that games from bought in UK won't work on an Australian Wii. The Wii uses regional-lockouts to prevent imported games from working - for example, Japanese games will not be recognized by an American Wii. Without using a mod-chip, they will likely be locked out of games from the own region if they're using a Wii from another region (although using a mod-chip could brick their Wii if they download a system update that intentionally bricks modified Wiis - yes, Nintendo has the power to do this, and many laws in Japan, the US, and UK back up that power). Any new games will have to be from the Australian region, so they'll have to pay for shipping and other fees related to importing... not to mention that many games have staggered releases world-wide. Many games aren't released in Australia until many months have passed after being released in the US.
2 :
Absolutely, there's no reason for it not to. The only problem I see is the power outlet that connects to the wall. That varies from country to country. Let's say the U.S. and Mexico both use the same type of wall outlets, but in Europe, they use bigger wall outlets so you are either going to somehow get one. Find out what type of outlet does Europe and Australia use, if they are the same, then you don't have to do anything, if they are different, then you are left with no choice but to let the person receiving the wii to buy an outlet or tell someone to get it for that person. Other than that it should work just fine because all wiis are the same as far as technical specifications for the most part. There are some places like South Korea were the wii can't play Gamecube games but it still works in other countries. If they weren't the same then tehy wouldn'tbe wiis they would be something else...
3 :
Yes, it will but my only concern is the power connection. I'm not big on Geography knowledge, but I'm pretty sure England has different power connections and ports to Australia. If not, you can always get him to send it back and then you can refund it and give him the money and he may be able to change it for UK currency.
4 :
Definitely! Just be sure to tell your gift recievers that they will need a AC Adapter converter for the other region!

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

what can a 13 year old do for volunteer work in england derby

what can a 13 year old do for volunteer work in england derby?

Community Service - 1 Answers
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1 :
Maybe this can help?

Thursday, March 1, 2012

how many hours a day can you legally work in England in retail

how many hours a day can you legally work in England in retail?

London - 1 Answers
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1 :
There is no set amount of hours per day that you can legally work. There is a maximum working week of 48 hours and this can be averaged over a number of weeks. For example: you may have 2 weeks @ 60 hours per week then a third week @ 24 hours over the week and this is perfectly legal. In saying that, there is a legal requirement to have at least an 11 hour break (rest period) between working days...so really, your working day can be no longer than 13 hours (inclusive of breaks).