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			(#1)
			 
		 
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				 Senior Member 
				Prepaid Professionist 
				
					
		
			
			
			Posts: 1,465 
				
				Join Date: 27 Feb 2004 
				Location: Mississippi, USA 
				
				
				
					Country:  
				
			 
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	 Well, since I dropped off the net about Christmas it's been one of my more eventful “vacations”. All I can say is that you don't want to think about what will happen to you if you're in a 737 that decides to spontaneously disassemble itself in midair. In the mean time, I was able to do some interesting research on prepaids and roaming in Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines. An interesting side note is that while I was in route to Singapore a major earthquake occurred off Japan. The ensuing submarine turbidity flows cut several communications cables in the eastern Pacific, disrupting communications all over East Asia. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
	First thing, I've been beta testing a new international SIM from CelTrek.com. This appears to be similar to YackieMobile in that it is an Israeli SIM with a US number. CelTrek: Worked on all nets in Singapore, even when earthquake disrupted communications. Worked on Smart and Globe networks in Philippines but I needed to wait about 1 minute for the callback. Worked on INDOSAT and ProXL (Excelindo) in Indonesia. Did not work on TelComSel and did not register on any network in Malaysia. Singapore: Purchased StarHub “Green” prepaid at a “7/11” store for S$18.00. They have a S$0.59/day option to allow unmetered incoming calls. This, coupled with VoiceStick, allowed me to receive calls from my US number for $0.077c/min. Indonesia: Got an INDOSAT “Mentari” prepaid. Not sure of cost as it was given to me by work. SMS sent to my T-Mobile (US) phone did not arrive. When my T-Mobile phone roamed onto the ProXL (Excelindo) network I received a SMS informing me of the local phone number I’d been assigned for free incoming calls. I called this number and, despite the fact that I had all my incoming calls forwarded to voicemail, I still received the call. I then set ProXL as my preferred network in Indonesia. The test call has not shown up on my T-Mobile billing, so I assume it works. This is a great feature which I hope many more networks adopt. You can avoid having to buy a local prepaid for short visits if they give you a local number for free incoming calls. This worked with my Mobal SIM as well but not for a variety of international prepaids. Incoming calls in Indonesia with 09 are listed as 69cts/min. Using ProXL’s automatic local number you can get incoming calls forwarded via VoiceStick for about 11c/min and callbacks from CBW for about 20c/min. Earthquake: T-Mobile and 09 would not reliably register on nets in Singapore after the earthquake that cut undersea communications cables. It's better now.  | 
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			(#2)
			 
		 
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				 Administrator 
				Prepaid Genius 
				
					
		
			
				
			
			
			Posts: 1,650 
				
				Join Date: 13 Jan 2004 
				Location: Florence, Italy 
				
				
				
					Country:  
				
			 
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	 Quote: 
	
 ![]() My Phones: iPhone 2G, E65, N70, P910 DVB-H, A835, 6630, 7600, 6210, S55, T39 "Working" PrePaids: IT: Wind, H3G, Vodafone, Tim, CoopVoce, Poste Mobile, Telepass Mobile, Uno Mobile - CH: OrangeClick - RSM: Prima Easy - UK: O2, H3G - INT: United Mobile, TravelSim, ICQ SIM "Deceased" PrePaids: IT: Blu - AT: H3G - FR: Itineris - ES: Yoigo - GR: Cosmote, Frog - HR: Tele2 - UK: Virgin, Orange TO: UCall - NZ: Vodafone - IN: Hutch - CAN: Fido - USA: T-Mobile - INT: Travelfone, CallKey, Globalsim, HopMobile, GT, 09, Mobal, Yackiemobile ITALIAN TLC BLOG  | 
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