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(#11)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Guru
Posts: 1,211
Join Date: 06 Feb 2005
Location: Swidnik-home, Lublin-work
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(#12)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Pioneer
Posts: 529
Join Date: 01 Dec 2004
Location: Köln
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Secondly, I have used E-Plus for close to 6 years and I haven't had any problems with them in any major German cities. Since the incoming calls are free in Western Europe, it might be a good idea for your daughter to try out E-Plus and O2 in each place she visits to get an idea of which network works better for that area. |
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(#13)
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The great Dictator!
Prepaid Prophet
Posts: 2,487
Join Date: 13 Jan 2004
Location: Trieste/Trst
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Deceased Prepaids: CZ: Oskar, Eurotel; SK: Orange; DE: E-Plus, Aldi, Simyo; GE: Geocell; AM: Armentel; PL: Heyah, Plus; LT: Tele2; LV: Amigo; EE: Elisa; UA: Kyivstar; NZ: Vodafone; INT: UM, UM+, ICQSim. GSM/3G Phones: Nokia Lumia 630 dual sim |
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(#14)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Professionist
Posts: 1,465
Join Date: 27 Feb 2004
Location: Mississippi, USA
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(#15)
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The great Dictator!
Prepaid Prophet
Posts: 2,487
Join Date: 13 Jan 2004
Location: Trieste/Trst
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![]() Yes, what I mean is that "traditionally-900" operators often give priority to 900 channels (they have more), while "traditionally-1800" operators will give that priority to 1800 channels. So I suppose that a 1800-only phone could have some problems with the first ones, while a 900-only phone will have with the latter ones.
In any case, a dual-band 900/1800 in Europe is almost always advisable. Deceased Prepaids: CZ: Oskar, Eurotel; SK: Orange; DE: E-Plus, Aldi, Simyo; GE: Geocell; AM: Armentel; PL: Heyah, Plus; LT: Tele2; LV: Amigo; EE: Elisa; UA: Kyivstar; NZ: Vodafone; INT: UM, UM+, ICQSim. GSM/3G Phones: Nokia Lumia 630 dual sim |
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(#16)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Guru
Posts: 1,211
Join Date: 06 Feb 2005
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Era and Plus ("primarily" 900 only) are said to be useless for 1800 only phones whereas Orange ("primarily" 1800 only) works OK with 1800 only phones in all the 1800 coverage area. Since Poland is not in the plan of the trip under consideration, I didn't mention this specific case but I was afraid that this unpleasant situation may happen somewhere else. |
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(#17)
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The great Dictator!
Prepaid Prophet
Posts: 2,487
Join Date: 13 Jan 2004
Location: Trieste/Trst
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Deceased Prepaids: CZ: Oskar, Eurotel; SK: Orange; DE: E-Plus, Aldi, Simyo; GE: Geocell; AM: Armentel; PL: Heyah, Plus; LT: Tele2; LV: Amigo; EE: Elisa; UA: Kyivstar; NZ: Vodafone; INT: UM, UM+, ICQSim. GSM/3G Phones: Nokia Lumia 630 dual sim |
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(#18)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Pioneer
Posts: 529
Join Date: 01 Dec 2004
Location: Köln
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![]() The GSM 900/1800 and GSM 1800-only arrangement will change in the decade or so since the German Bundesnetzagentur/RegTP that regulates the license distribution/communications infrastructure plans to have E-Plus and O2 give up some GSM 1800 spectrum in exchange for some GSM 900 spectrum. T-Mobile and Vodafone will get some more GSM 1800 spectrum as well.
Article from Teltarif.de: RegTP wants to move E-Netz (GSM 1800) networks to the GSM 900 band Frequencies to be redistributed among the 4 established networks May 8th, 2005 When GSM was launched in Germany back in 1992, the mobile world was still in perfect shape. The D-Netz providers T-Mobile and Vodafone stayed in the 900 Mhz range and the E-Netz providers E-Plus (1994) and O2 (199 ![]() E-Plus and O2 to move to the D-Netz According to a survey conducted by the RegTP, all involved parties would support moving E-Plus and O2 to the E-GSM band which is located just the current D-Netz frequencies. The frequency bands located in the 880-890 and 925-935 Mhz were either used by the military or by CB - Citizens Band - radio. No definitive decision has been made yet since the changes wouldn't be made until 2016. It is certain that the new frequency distribution will have to be completed by December 31st, 2016. T-Mobile's and Vodafone's licenses are due to expire before that date but would receive an extension to cover that missing time gap. This is the RegTP's way of planing ahead and playing it "safe". If all were to go the way the Bonn-based agency sees it, then E-Plus and O2 will be partially migrated to the E-GSM band. The new frequencies will be distributed in 4x 5 Mhz blocks (2 for E-Plus and 2 for O2) which is the spectrum request both companies discreetly submitted to the RegTP. In exchange, they would have to vacate parts of the 1800 Mhz band. The vacated frequencies would be kept available for later UMTS-expansion. Consequences of the frequency redistribution A frequency migration would make it possible for the E-Netz providers to build out their networks at "normal" prices which would also make the arguments cease that in-building penetration with the D-Netz providers is better. E-Plus customers would have to make sure that they have a dual-band GSM 900/1800 handset. All of this might be unnecessary since times may have thrown these ambitious plans a curveball. Insiders are speculating about whether O2 Germany will even continue its own domestic network build-out by instead expanding their current national roaming agreement with T-Mobile. E-Plus has invested heavily in their long overdue network expansion. Branch insiders are undecided whether E-Plus will continue to expand its own network in areas that it doesn't fully cover yet or whether existing markets should be consilidated since many users repeatedly complain about the lack of "in-building" coverage. Source: http://www.teltarif.de/arch/2005/kw18/s17063.html Updated Article: E-Plus and O2 will also use the D-Netz Frequencies -In exchange, portions of the E-Netz will have to be vacated February 8th, 2006 The two German E-Netz (GSM 1800) providers E-Plus and O2 will be allowed to expand to the frequency bands located below 900 Mhz. Up until now, this band was used exclusively by T-Mobile and Vodafone. The federal Bundesnetzagentur (BNetzA) confirmed to teltarif.de today that E-Plus and O2 will be allocated spectrum in the 880-990 and 925-935 Mhz bands which were used by the German military that were returned to the BNetzA some time ago. Both providers will receive 2x 5 Mhz paired frequency blocks but have to vacate 2x 5 Mhz paired 1800 Mhz frequency blocks within a year. This exchange will bring numerous advantages to both providers. This will be exemplified mostly in the countryside where the expansion of the 900 Mhz band covers greater distances than in the 1800 Mhz band. Both providers will be able to provide more coverage with less sites. Customers won't fell this change since almost all users in the 1800 Mhz already use handsets that support the GSM 900/1800 bands. GSM 1800-only handsets will retain the use of the remaining 1800 Mhz frequencies. But both providers can't start the network conversions just yet. Since this is a federally-initiated policy change, this proposed change can still be fought in court. The D-Netz providers made the same change back in 1999, they acquired GSM 1800 spectrum in order to boost their voice network capacity in major German cities. Source: http://www.teltarif.de/arch/2006/kw06/s20416.html |
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(#19)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Professionist
Posts: 1,465
Join Date: 27 Feb 2004
Location: Mississippi, USA
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![]() If I were setting up the plan for a country that had no cellular service at all, I'd start out with two carriers, each having about 25 MHz of 900 MHz spectrum and about 30 MHz of 1800 MHz. After X years (X >= 5) they'd each give up about 12 MHz of 900 MHz spectrum for two new carriers who would each also get about 30 MHz of 1800. Not sure how I'd allocate 3G. If my country had a lot of very rural areas I'd probably set up some way of sharing the 450 MHz spectrum for coverage in the outback. As they say, "Hindsight is 20/20"
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(#20)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Pioneer
Posts: 529
Join Date: 01 Dec 2004
Location: Köln
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![]() I don't know what the 450 Mhz band is being used for here in Germany. It was never used for the analog German C-Netz which was located in the 900 Mhz band prior to the introduction of GSM in 1992.
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