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(#1)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Guru
Posts: 1,091
Join Date: 11 Feb 2004
Location: Detroit (formerly Dubai)
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![]() My Virgin is not on direct debit. I could pass Orange's credit check, but not Virgin's.
I have a UK phone number hooked to my Asterisks box with numerous "virtual extensions." Calls to the number plus a five digit extension connect me to my top fifty numbers. I also use this approach to extend "my fav" plans on an American and a Canadian carrier that I use. It is also my UAE favorite international number on Etisislut. With this approach, I also have free incoming throughout the US and unlimited 1.2 cents a minute inbound in Canada. |
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(#2)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Specialist
Posts: 869
Join Date: 15 Oct 2004
Country:
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![]() Motel 75...
Didn't take a court order in Germany to get the prepaids off of stealing away people's credit the same way the French do and going to a fixed period, if any, of expiration? |
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(#3)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Expert
Posts: 267
Join Date: 09 Jun 2006
Location: Malkavian University
Country:
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![]() Virgin has always roamed outside the UK its just the tariff/ payment type that either allowed it or barred it!
PAYG up until recently didnt (as far as i know) allow you to roam, but only with a tri or quad band handset but on standard payg the costs where quite large! i have yet to use my virgin payg or virgin pay monthly abroad (well my payg i took to france not long after virgin mobile launched and at the time they didnt offer roaming!) so i cant really comment on roaming partners or coverage! nor can i comment on costs! Active phones: Blackberry Torch (02), Google Nexus one (Vodafone) Inactive Sims: Oskar Czech R, BT Genie Pay as you go UK. Spare (unused phones) NEC 616, Ericsson t68/i, Nokia 3310, Sendo m550, Mototorola v66i, Motorola a1000.lg u880, Sony Ericsson t230. Orange spv m5000, Samsung z400, Motorola SLVR (Red)!, lobster tv700, spv m700, prada phone, motorola l7e, Skype phone, siemens sl65, blackberry 8810, Nokia 6500 slide X2. |
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(#4)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Pioneer
Posts: 573
Join Date: 15 Jun 2006
Location: Berlin
Country:
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![]() Quote:
Although the expiration was OK, and you could periodically get a starter packet with phone for what was then a highly subsidized price (In 2001, for example, a basic Sagem with Vodafone card for 49 DM, or 25 €, with 15 DM credit), the per-minute rates could be quite high; on the typical variable-rate prepaid, about 80 cents for calling a landline during the day and 70 cents for calling other mobile networks off-peak, although the 7 cent weekend landline calls were a good consolation prize). In short, the offer was still better than what is available now in France, with its extortionate rates and extremely short expiration dates after which all credit is lost. BTW, the €2 per minute charge that many German prepaids charge for international calls dates from this time: all prepaids charged DM 3.99 for all destinations (remember that until 1998, Deutsche Telekom had an expensive monopoly on landlines; calling the US was something like DM 2.50 a minute, or $1.50, billed in fixed 23-pfennig impulse units that were valid for a shorter duration, depending on the distance of the target country (5.33 seconds to Argentina, for example). While landline calling prices plummeted in 1998, this international rate remained unchanged on mobiles, and was even converted into the euro equivalent (€1.84) in 2002 -- or even rounded up to 1.99. However, in the last few three years there have been many new MVNOs, starting with Simyo, and the majors have tried to compete. Some of the new MVNOs, and offers such as the low-price Vodafone CallYa Compact, offered low prices but poor expiration policies. CallYa Compact originally expired after 92 days without topping up, and maximum topup validity was 92 days, no matter how much you added (officially minimum 15 €). Having switched to Vf Compact from 10 years on a contract, and with my expiration date initially 15 months in the future, I received an SMS from Voda in early summer 2006 telling me that my account was now valid only till August -- didn't make me happy... However, it turned out there was a loophole -- you could restart the 92 days by sending a smaller amount via bank transfer...)Smobil, another Vodafone-in-disguise offer, offered max. 180 days after the biggest top-up. (OTOH, MVNOs with more independence, such as Aldi Talk, offered very generous expiration policies, initially one year, max. two years). In the end, the court ruling changed this, and now the topup validity issue is largely moot, though some providers such as Talkline, still maintain them (even the 92-day limit on Vf Compact), but they return the money to your bank account at the end if requested. Not a good way to retain customers, in my view. Quote:
Former DE: Vodafone, T-Mobile, O2, Blauworld, 01051mobile, Solomo, Lycamobile, Simyo, Congstar, Fonic, Edeka Mobile, Lidl Mobile; PL: Heyah, Era, Virgin, Sami Swoi, Orange, POP, iPlus, Carrefour Mova, Telepin Mobi, Play, Lycamobile, T-Mobile; UK: Vodafone, T-Mobile, Virgin; US: T-Mobile, AT&T, Lycamobile; CZ: Vodafone, Oskar; ES: Lebara; GR: Vodafone, Wind; UA: Vodafone; IL: Orange; TR: Turkcell |
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