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(#1)
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![]() ...hm...
Sounds like Isle of Man roaming cards are in deep deep trouble and one would expect the other issuers to quickly follow suit... Didn't somebody on this board about six or seven months ago suggest they had heard from some executive at a telcom type conference who indicated the free ride of the Isle of Man sim providers was about to end... And how will this affect a roaming card issued using a Jersey roaming partner...I wonder who that means? |
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(#2)
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At that time it was just rumors. Moderator Andy followed up w. a reply stating, as I did, that it was just a rumor. === 13-03-2007, 01:37 Re: IOM rates. There was a "high end" telephony conf. about 10 days ago in S.F. sponsored by oreillynet.com. There were at least 200 people there from all over the world. No - I didn't spend the $2K to attend. However, I did go one afternoon and evening when you could sign up and get into the Exhibit Hall for free. I couldn't help it if I accidentally walked in on a couple of conferences. Many/most of the sessions were WAY above my head. Anyway, I wound up talking to someone w. a UK accent - a person who is somewhat well known in "telephony circles" in the U.S., (he was interviewed by Reuters about an hour earlier). I asked him about the IOM "carriers". He said that the free ride for the IOM resellers will probably end soon - for the same reason the Iowa "free calling to Europe" operations were shut down. [An aside, there is still one of those free calls to many countries operations with a Minnesota number 218-339-1990. At least it was still working last Friday.] He didn't tell me the exact reasons and I didn't know anyone else to verify this with. My guess is that either (1) the central UK govt. subsidizes the IOM operator and/or (2) there is a much higher termination cost for calling an IOM number that the carriers either (a) don't know about or (b) do know but their systems can't distinguish between calls going to diff. UK - +44 - systems. I do know that some operators can't distinguish between calls going to the mainland U.S. and countries in the Carribean w. +1 numbers for setting rates. So, for now, this is just a RUMOR. I have seen this mentioned either here or elsewhere in a forum. A/o Oct 20, 2013 no need for intl prepaid as T-Mobile U.S. includes voice roaming at 20¢/min (in and out)., unlimited text (in and out), and unlimited data in 140+ countries. My Plan -[6 lines] U.S. T-Mobile unlimited minutes (incoming and outgoing), unlimited text, fast data on each line. that $145/mo. total! . (In U.S. no surcharge for calling a cell.) If a line exceeds 2G of data in a month, pay $10 more for that line. [That only happens a couple times/year. |
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(#3)
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![]() Still just rumours. Everything I read about the current problems appears to point to financial troubles at Callkey (the usual one, big loans, some revenue, but no profit).
There hasn't been any mention of regulatory problems, and it's hard to see why there should be. What the IOM (and other) carriers are doing is perfectly legal. There's no subsidy of any sort on these number ranges (indeed the opposite, this is an expensive place to operate from). No "free ride" to end. I notice Truphone uses +44 7624 as well. Has anybody had any problems with them? |
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(#4)
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(#5)
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I think we remember that People who know more about the UK and Isle of Man governments and their telecoms regulatory bodies and providers have already tried to correct your unfounded guesswork about tax subsidies, termination fees and whatever else. Namely, the UK does not subsidize the IoM operator, which is part of a large multinational - and which, rather unsurprisingly but inconveniently for this wonderful hypothesis, is still trading quite normally. Quote: Quote: And since this was written, as we now know, 2 companies have launched similar arrangements with Jersey Telecom And there seem to be some global SIMs appearing with UK numbers. And even before your post, from January in fact, there was an add-on option for O2 UK that was on similar tariff levels as the global SIM cards while in Europe, free incoming, 25p outgoing. What unidentified-source over-simplistic and patronising remarks can you report for them? |
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(#6)
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As you did mention above - people here did say IOM carriers were not subsidized. I tried to make it clear I was NOT told why some (all?) of these IOM cards would be gone "soon". I thought i made it clear my reasoning was pure speculation. Nobody has posted to this date what did cause this, AFIK. I only went to this conference because it was in S.F. (my home area). The technology items discussed there were far above my head. The exhibit area was open to anyone on one evening. I happened to see one well known person who spoke about roaming, SIMS, etc. and simply stopped him in the hallway and asked about IOM, UM etc. All he quickly said was that IOM cards wouldn't be around much longer. He didn't say why and wouldn't respond when i asked him. ...mike A/o Oct 20, 2013 no need for intl prepaid as T-Mobile U.S. includes voice roaming at 20¢/min (in and out)., unlimited text (in and out), and unlimited data in 140+ countries. My Plan -[6 lines] U.S. T-Mobile unlimited minutes (incoming and outgoing), unlimited text, fast data on each line. that $145/mo. total! . (In U.S. no surcharge for calling a cell.) If a line exceeds 2G of data in a month, pay $10 more for that line. [That only happens a couple times/year. |
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(#7)
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Given that there was no such free ride, in either of those cases, perhaps your correspondent was not as knowledgeable as you hope, or you misheard. I read elsewhere that the Iowa termination fees were unilaterally increased by certain companies from 5 to 14 cents, and the dispute started from that point. I don't know if that is true, but it certainly does not parallel this case. |
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(#8)
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![]() This discussion begs the question of how these Channel Island operators can afford to route a call to so many countries within the revenue they're receiving for the call, when larger providers won't do so.
Frankly I hope these services stay viable for a long time (United Mobile came in quite handy for me while I was in Switzerland, Germany and Liechtenstein last month). I like the idea of having a single inbound number I can use on many foreign trips, even if I end up using a different SIM for most of my outbound calling. Hardware: Too much but notably iPhone 5, iPad Mini Retina LTE, Moto G LTE (N.A. version), iPhone 4. All unlocked. |
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(#9)
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I don't think larger providers are hungry enough to do global sims, and it's a different business: callback. Where callbacks under a certain cost are paid for by the revenue the sim company receives. These are the free incoming countries (since when you make a call you need an incoming leg of the callback). Above that, they start to charge for incoming. But I think recent events might prove that their business model doesn't always work and might not be sustainable. A factor in this is probably people like us combining free incoming with another company's callback - so the sim card gets very little income from outgoing calls, which is where the profit is. This is where a lot of VOIP companies are having a problem also - they attract users who want to save money, who then promptly identify where the VOIP company is overcharging to get profit, and subsitute that part of the deal, so that the VOIP company is just left with the loss-making parts... (if Truphone is still working then it's clearly a Callkey problem rather than an IOM numbering or regulatory problem, as they have similar ranges). |
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(#10)
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