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On Mon, Nov 28, 2005 at 12:09:20PM -0500, Rich Braun wrote: > Ward Vandewege <ward at pong.be> challenged me: > > Ah, but avoiding the $2/min roaming charges when abroad is just a matter of: > > > > a) unlocking the phone (or buying a phone _without_ a plan, which means it > > won't be locked into a specific provider) > > b) getting a local (prepaid) SIM card > > This did NOT work for me. Specifically, taking an American phone to Japan > won't work because Japan doesn't have the GSM network. Taking it to Singapore > or Thailand won't work because the frequency range is wrong. Taking my Thai > phone to Peru similarly didn't work. Even with an unlocked phone, often > you'll get the runaround at the local phone providers' shops, because they > want to sell you a new phone and because your Spanish|Thai|Mandarin|Portuguese > language capabilities can't match theirs. > > You get the idea. It's not just a matter of unlocking a GSM phone. You have > to have a super-duper quad-band phone (850-900-1800-1900 MHz, all four > frequencies, only 2 of which are used in the USA) and choose your travel > destinations carefully. Ah, quite - I assumed that was obvious, my bad :( I have a three-band GSM phone, and it serves me well on both sides of the Atlantic (using a prepaid SIM while in Europe). I got the phone here with a T-mobile plan, which made it free after rebates. This is a Nokia 6610, which I unlocked using some code generator found online... Ward. -- Pong.be -( "Fools ignore complexity. Pragmatists suffer it. Some )- Virtual hosting -( can avoid it. Geniuses remove it." -- Perlis's )- http://pong.be -( Programming Proverb #58, SIGPLAN Notices, Sept. 1982 )- GnuPG public key: http://gpg.dtype.org
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