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(#1)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Prophet
Posts: 2,128
Join Date: 10 Dec 2004
Country:
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That comment has only appeared in the past hour and a half.
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(#2)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Pioneer
Posts: 696
Join Date: 01 Aug 2006
Location: Madrid
Country:
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Just shows how pro these chaps really are!
They probably put the comment in after reading your comments on one of the blogs. In any case, dead confusing even with the comment as the rates still have a € next to them! |
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(#3)
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Member
Advanced Member
Posts: 97
Join Date: 01 Oct 2007
Country:
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There's no doubt that Maxroam rushed to get this product out, and the website has had one problem after another. This is at least the third rate sheet they have posted. However, this does appear to be an honest mistake -- the rates shown are indeed the same as they were, only expressed in dollars. I should have seen that when I noted that the rates were about one-third higher than they had been.
Comparing Maxroam to UM (which also rushed to get the UM+ rate out before it was ready), it looks like the Europe rates are pretty comparable. Maxroam might be a penny or two higher, but there is no setup charge. Maxroam has a substantial price advantage when roaming in some parts of the world (e.g., China, Russia, Central America), but a disadvantage when roaming in others (e.g., the Middle East). Maxroam's rates to mobile phones are the same as its rates to landlines, which is nice. Maxroam does charge for incoming calls, but it provides local telephone numbers for some countries. I realize that I could set up my own DID, but I prefer not to do that. I was pretty upset when I thought they had changed their rates after only three days. With that issue resolved, I think Maxroam is a pretty decent value. |
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(#4)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Expert
Posts: 499
Join Date: 20 Feb 2007
Country:
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Quote:
The DID number is nice but I still don't know how the phone can be reached directly. Are they using a +44 number, iceland or what ? |
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(#5)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 160
Join Date: 12 Jan 2007
Location: Arendonk, Belgium
Country:
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Quote:
When I read this http://www.goebel.net/technews/labels/Maxroam.html I'm convinced they have a lot of work to do, and that they just wanted to establish a place in this difficult market in time. Quote:
So whay they do is simply pointing different DID's directly to the SIM-card, and not a phonenumber. This doesn't answer these questions:
BTW: just minutes ago (12.10 PM) they corrected the rate-table again. Now with a different pricing for Mobiles and fixed lines. Belgium: Proximus Smart+ 15 (+32 496 contract) Voip: Weepee-voip.be Phones: Apple iPhone 32Gb 5S |
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(#6)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 160
Join Date: 12 Jan 2007
Location: Arendonk, Belgium
Country:
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Quote:
Setting up your own system with PBXes, and my own DIDs and Routes is nice, but in the end, these are all extra hops which have an impact on call-quality, and there are too much possible points of failure. With an integrated system like MAXroam, I think that the chance of running into problems is much smaller. Belgium: Proximus Smart+ 15 (+32 496 contract) Voip: Weepee-voip.be Phones: Apple iPhone 32Gb 5S |
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(#7)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Prophet
Posts: 2,128
Join Date: 10 Dec 2004
Country:
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I think it will be more popular in America, where people are used to the idea that calling mobiles is the same cost as landlines. Other places, where people have contract mobiles with inclusive minutes, it doesn't matter as much that they call a mobile.
The advantage of Maxroam and its similar predecessors is having the possibility to add landlines in the places you visit, if you'll expect loads of incoming calls from there. Frequent or long stay visitors or groups will get a local SIM though, so that will be the dilemma, how much use is expected. But without getting too complicated and subscribing to loads of DIDs, pbxes etc, there are possibilities like Sipbroker/Voxalot, which means people can set up one VoIP call forward to themselves, then others can reach them via local landlines in 25 countries, eg in France 01(Paris)p*010xxxxxx like a simple callthrough (similar in effect to CBW pin2dest), and costing me a few cents a minute. That's why I think that Maxroam isn't yet what it suggests, a disruptive approach that has broken through to achieving local calls at local rate; it's still roaming at roaming rates. This week a product has launched in the UK with inclusive minutes packages for international calls. If that becomes popular and spreads, then perhaps ringing visitors roaming in one's own country or friends on a foreign SIM on their holidays won't be a big deal. And the minutes are free! Don't throw away the Liechtenstein SIM. |
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(#8)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 160
Join Date: 12 Jan 2007
Location: Arendonk, Belgium
Country:
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Quote:
Quote:
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I understand that you are maybe disappointed because they are not already delivering what you hoped they would be. I also was hoping for eg. Data, but we'll have to wait another 6 months for that (see the link I posted to Markus Göbel's blog, a few messages up). Quote:
I indeed will not throw away my UM-card, but probable that country will not be included in many bundles, they probably start with all EU-countries, and Liechtenstein isn't one of them. Belgium: Proximus Smart+ 15 (+32 496 contract) Voip: Weepee-voip.be Phones: Apple iPhone 32Gb 5S |
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(#9)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Pioneer
Posts: 696
Join Date: 01 Aug 2006
Location: Madrid
Country:
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Congrats on winning the iPhone ygeffens!
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(#10)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 160
Join Date: 12 Jan 2007
Location: Arendonk, Belgium
Country:
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Thanks
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Belgium: Proximus Smart+ 15 (+32 496 contract) Voip: Weepee-voip.be Phones: Apple iPhone 32Gb 5S |
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