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(#1)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 187
Join Date: 14 Sep 2008
Location: North America
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![]() I would like to know from other users on here who use them: what are the advantages of an international SIM besides maximum coverage & one number? Is the often high price per minute or megabyte worth such a convenience? I notice that SMS rates are multiple times higher than using the home SIM roaming abroad. Has anyone on here really saved money using these int'l SIMs or are they used as a backup/last resort solution like I have them as? Deals like Vodafone Passport & 3 Like Home (as well as whatever equivalent offerings Orange, T-Mobile, & O2/Telefonica have) are looking better every day.
The data rates I notice are astronomical and can easily sometimes be higher than standard roaming rates. Charging by the 10, 100, & 333 KB, sometimes with a session fee, is a real rip-off. I also notice these SIMs often get the discount rates only in a handful of countries in Europe, ditto anywhere else - your only solution would be a local SIM in that country. Considering we can find out who supplies the int'l SIM companies the service, would it make sense to check out the offers direct from the operator in question? (Like O2 UK, the operator that Mobal uses.) |
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(#2)
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Administrator
Prepaid Genius
Posts: 1,650
Join Date: 13 Jan 2004
Location: Florence, Italy
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![]() 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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(#3)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Specialist
Posts: 898
Join Date: 17 Mar 2004
Location: Richmond, VA USA
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The turf has changed quite a bit over the last 2 - 3 years. At one time international SIM users were probably way ahead of those who used their national cards and paid very high roaming prices. The new EU rates, Vodaphone Passport among others are all relatively new and quite competitive. If you dig deeper into the discussions here, you will find O9 (Iceland) and affiliates are probably DEAD. You will find several Isle of Man etc providers are DEAD. You find United Mobile raising its already somewhat high prices even higher. The internationals are struggling. In my case I bought two of these international cards and am using up the balances. I am unsure I will refill when the balances are used up. I sold several others, too. There is for my technically challenged wife the convenience of not having to change the SIM card as she moves about. This summer she may be in Europe without me, so I will give her one phone for Germany and one for other countries. She can do that. As noted, there is also the idea that you just give out one number, the international SIM, and friends and family can reach you on that number. This instead of giving them 6 phone numbers and your full itinerary for them to follow you over the course of your journey. Service: US T-MO post paid (2) - US T-MO prepaid (2) - UM+ - TravelSIM DE SIMYO - DE SUNSIM T-Mobile DE Calling Cards: Onesuite Enjoyprepaid AT&T MCI Mobivox |
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(#4)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Expert
Posts: 451
Join Date: 09 May 2005
Location: Berkeley, California and Miami
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![]() You are in the U.S.? If so, and you are a T-Mobile customer, you can use one of their UMA capable phones to connect to a wi-fi connection anywhere in the world. The minutes used would come out of your minute bucket (or you can pay $10/mo. for unlimited minutes while connected by UMA/wifi.
They obviously don't advertise the fact you can use their phones w. UMA capability this way - but they even provide support if you are overseas. Obviously this isn't as good as having a phone connection anywhere you have cell signal - but "free" calling can't be beaten. We have used it everywhere from the Dubai airport to hotels, coffee shops and apts. from UK, Spain, Costa Rica, Israel, etc. ...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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(#5)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 187
Join Date: 14 Sep 2008
Location: North America
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(#6)
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Member
Advanced Member
Posts: 97
Join Date: 01 Oct 2007
Country:
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![]() I have a couple of MAXRoam cards with some credit remaining. They both have local numbers, making it easy for friends to call, as well as a forwarding feature that lets me forward to any number, including European mobile numbers, for free. Could I save money over MAXRoam rates by getting a local SIM for the country I'm in, but then giving out my MAXRoam number forwarded to that SIM? I assume the local SIM will have better rates calling within country, but how bad are the rates calling back to the US? The countries I'm currently thinking of are France and Italy.
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(#7)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Expert
Posts: 344
Join Date: 28 Mar 2005
Location: See flag
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A lot has changed in the past few years and I'd say international SIMs had their market window - and blew it. They've never really become visible on the mass market, 90% of even international travellers have never heard of them. With both Callkey-based sims and now O9 based going under, it's clear the business model is still very difficult - the target market is expert users who want to pay as little as possible at all times, not exactly a way to make a profit! For example, just about all I used my O9 for was to get the free incoming in Mexico with callback, I made virtually no outbound calls with it. I now use local prepaid SIMs in my main three countries, and a VOIP account on the (wifi) phone. Plus a couple of UK postpaid (no monthly fee) SIMs for when I'm elsewhere without wifi - higher roaming costs but cheaper than trying to keep global sims active on the off-chance they'll still be in business when I next travel! For the one-number part of it, I have an IPkall US number, and a UK number, as "find-me" numbers that I forward, via a VOIP account, to whichever country sim I'm currently using (I pay the forwarding part but that's OK, especially as I can pick and choose VOIP rates). |
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(#8)
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Member
Advanced Member
Posts: 97
Join Date: 01 Oct 2007
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(#9)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Professionist
Posts: 1,257
Join Date: 22 Apr 2005
Location: Chicago
Country:
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![]() Actually, you can only forward maxroam to certain countries. I think they list 45 or so in the dropdown. Still a pretty good option since you can forward to mobiles too.
With the call quality and the okay call costs, this will likely be my primary roaming sim moving forward. The rest, yackie (if they come back from being dead!), UM+, will be backups. Quote:
Sim cards: AT&T (Contract), 3 UK, Piranha Mobile |
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(#10)
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Member
Advanced Member
Posts: 97
Join Date: 01 Oct 2007
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