The PPS6180 code may be related to call forwarding or network routing settings on the recipient's phone. It could be that the person you are calling has chosen to forward their calls to a different number or service, or there may be a temporary network issue causing the redirection.
If you're talking about a 'pay as you go' phone - no. If you mean a contract phone - yes !
Go phones are prepaid phones, which mean they have certain amount of minutes in them. So you can use that phone, until your minutes run out and then buy another go phone or refill the card.
It means he has to go. Possibly to do chores or homework.
go fck yourself
A cell phone does not have a busy signal. If the person is on the phone, the call would go to voicemail, or it would go to call waiting.
"Go Phone" is an AT&T cell phone. The Go Phone is an inexpensive cell phone with pay as you go service.
no. a go phones sim is programed for the go phone. no the actual at&t phone.
u can't text the thing or go to a certain place
go to translate.google.com on your phone and it can do it for you. If you mean how can you translate the symbols that you can't copy, that's impossible.
it means that no other media can go into your phone because media is all ready full with stuff
It's probably pps6180. Where as pps stands for pre paid service and 6180 is the code for what's wrong.. It usually means the user hasn't paid for pre paid service