World Phone??
#1
Original Poster


Join Date: Apr 1999
Location: Homosassa, FL & Ringwood, NJ -UA-G(Lifetime); SPG-Plat (Lifetime)
Posts: 6,122
World Phone??
I see multple threads on cell phones. I have a question that I don't see addressed.
I recently received a mailing from Nowthwest offering a Nextel offer ("Nextel Worldwide"). It includes $100 off a $225 Motorola i2000. It offers one number, world wide, and "works" world wide. The price is mentioned as 45.99/mo. Calls form overseas are about $1.29-2.00/minute.
The lure of a phone that works "everywhere" is attractive. My wife OR I take about 8-10 trips a year to places like Europe (France, Italy, Ireland, UK) and Asia (Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Japan).
I would not be using the phone a lot, but need to check in occasionally for business, so the high per minute charges are not a huge deal.
The question is, is there a better (cheaper) way to have "world" access with one number,one phone etc. for all of the countries mentioned above?
Thanks in advance
Ed
Edite to add: I am currently a Verizon customer with a Motorola StarTAC
[This message has been edited by Vulcan (edited 05-16-2003).]
I recently received a mailing from Nowthwest offering a Nextel offer ("Nextel Worldwide"). It includes $100 off a $225 Motorola i2000. It offers one number, world wide, and "works" world wide. The price is mentioned as 45.99/mo. Calls form overseas are about $1.29-2.00/minute.
The lure of a phone that works "everywhere" is attractive. My wife OR I take about 8-10 trips a year to places like Europe (France, Italy, Ireland, UK) and Asia (Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Japan).
I would not be using the phone a lot, but need to check in occasionally for business, so the high per minute charges are not a huge deal.
The question is, is there a better (cheaper) way to have "world" access with one number,one phone etc. for all of the countries mentioned above?
Thanks in advance
Ed
Edite to add: I am currently a Verizon customer with a Motorola StarTAC
[This message has been edited by Vulcan (edited 05-16-2003).]
#2
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Join Date: Sep 2000
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T-mobile sounds like a much better option, the i2000 is OLD (like August 2000 old) and doesn't do tri-band (or even dual band GSM) networks. It won't work in Japan but then again neither will any GSM phone. Pick something with today's technology.
On T-mobile most countries are $0.99, others are between $1.49 and $2.99 except for some places you don't want to be anyway...
On T-mobile most countries are $0.99, others are between $1.49 and $2.99 except for some places you don't want to be anyway...
#3
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Pennsylvania
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For worldwide use you need a GSM phone. In addition (I guess) to Nextel, AT&T and T-Mobile have GSM in the US. In my opinion, AT&T is somewhat misleading about the world capabilities of their phones, and their international roaming rates are higher than T-Mobile's (and include a monthly fee, where T-Mobile does not have a Monthly fee).
Here are T-Mobile's international rates:
Europe*: $0.99/minute
Asia**: $1.49/minute
Malaysia: $1.99/minute
* Includes France, Italy, Ireland, UK, others
** Includes Thailand, Singapore, others
For a complete list go here: http://www.t-mobile.com/international/coverage.asp
First time I've noticed: Japan is not listed as a T-Mobile international roaming country. But for the others T-Mobile will be cheaper (and you'll be able to get a cheaper plan - my plan is $29.99/month for free nationwide roaming, unlimited weekends, 300 anytime minutes) and you might be able to swing a free worldphone as well.
edited to add: Scott's message reminds me that Japan isn't a GSM country - so that's why no GSM roaming there.
I looked at the phones on T-mobile - you can get a dual-band (900-1900 MHz GSM) Samsung R225M for free, but a tri-band phone(900-1800-1900 MHz) will give you slightly better coverage for $99 or $149. I had no problems with a 900-1900 GSM in/around London last month.
[This message has been edited by pdhenry (edited 05-16-2003).]
Here are T-Mobile's international rates:
Europe*: $0.99/minute
Asia**: $1.49/minute
Malaysia: $1.99/minute
* Includes France, Italy, Ireland, UK, others
** Includes Thailand, Singapore, others
For a complete list go here: http://www.t-mobile.com/international/coverage.asp
First time I've noticed: Japan is not listed as a T-Mobile international roaming country. But for the others T-Mobile will be cheaper (and you'll be able to get a cheaper plan - my plan is $29.99/month for free nationwide roaming, unlimited weekends, 300 anytime minutes) and you might be able to swing a free worldphone as well.
edited to add: Scott's message reminds me that Japan isn't a GSM country - so that's why no GSM roaming there.
I looked at the phones on T-mobile - you can get a dual-band (900-1900 MHz GSM) Samsung R225M for free, but a tri-band phone(900-1800-1900 MHz) will give you slightly better coverage for $99 or $149. I had no problems with a 900-1900 GSM in/around London last month.
[This message has been edited by pdhenry (edited 05-16-2003).]
#5
Join Date: Aug 2001
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IMO you're better off sticking with Verizon. Their roaming rates are comparable (T-mobile is cheaper in Europe by .50/minute but MUCH more expensive in other parts of the world... Verizon is an absolute bargain in the former USSR) and they can get you 'same number' roaming in both Europe AND Japan. While you would use different handsets in each place, your number would remain the same. In the case of Europe (or indeed any GSM location) you could use any GSM phone and would have a Verizon/Vodafone SIM which would carry your Verizon number. For Japan, you would have a J-phone PDC handset which would be coded to your Verizon number.
[This message has been edited by kanebear (edited 05-16-2003).]
[This message has been edited by kanebear (edited 05-16-2003).]
#6

Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: ORD: UA GS - 1MM, SPG Plat, Marriott Plat
Posts: 116
Amazon has the Sonyericsson T68i for free after rebates and activation with T Mobile. I bought this phone from them back in March and am very happy with it.
Edited to add new activation with T Mobile.
[This message has been edited by Cobijonz (edited 05-16-2003).]
Edited to add new activation with T Mobile.
[This message has been edited by Cobijonz (edited 05-16-2003).]
#7




Join Date: Jan 2000
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Verizon is slated to have a CDMA2000/GSM-GPRS device towards the end of the year. It is the form factor of a standard CDMA2000 flip phone - was shown at 3GSM in Cannes this year.
#8




Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Portland, OR
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Having had ATT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile domestically I shall try to rank them based on my experience.
Domestic network (does the phone usually work)
1. Verizon
2. AT&T
3. T-mobile
Domestic network roaming, size of network and availability of service
1. AT&T
2. T-mobile
3. Verizon
Domestic cost
1. T-mobile
2. Verizon
3. AT&T
International roaming service
1. T-mobile
2. AT&T
3. Verizon (really does not have any)
International roaming costs (with some exceptions such as Indonesia)
1. T-mobile
2. AT&T
Verizon does not seem to be a viable international option as one must rent or buy a separate phone - per their own web page. I switched from Verizon to T-mobile solely for the international roaming and the less expensive service with greater benefits.
Examples: Nation-wide long distance at cost of local call, Free domestic roaming, large number of minutes, free weekends including unlimited long distance domestically.
My plan is family. $75 with all taxes and fees for 2 cell phones. Nation-wide long distance, 800 minutes split between the 2 phones. One can use 0 and the other could conceivably use 800. International roaming and SIM unlock. Free weekends, 50 alpha-numeric messages per month. Web available for $2.99/month fee. Knowlegable customer service. The only down-fall is that the local service needs improvement - dropped calls and service area black-outs.
Domestic network (does the phone usually work)
1. Verizon
2. AT&T
3. T-mobile
Domestic network roaming, size of network and availability of service
1. AT&T
2. T-mobile
3. Verizon
Domestic cost
1. T-mobile
2. Verizon
3. AT&T
International roaming service
1. T-mobile
2. AT&T
3. Verizon (really does not have any)
International roaming costs (with some exceptions such as Indonesia)
1. T-mobile
2. AT&T
Verizon does not seem to be a viable international option as one must rent or buy a separate phone - per their own web page. I switched from Verizon to T-mobile solely for the international roaming and the less expensive service with greater benefits.
Examples: Nation-wide long distance at cost of local call, Free domestic roaming, large number of minutes, free weekends including unlimited long distance domestically.
My plan is family. $75 with all taxes and fees for 2 cell phones. Nation-wide long distance, 800 minutes split between the 2 phones. One can use 0 and the other could conceivably use 800. International roaming and SIM unlock. Free weekends, 50 alpha-numeric messages per month. Web available for $2.99/month fee. Knowlegable customer service. The only down-fall is that the local service needs improvement - dropped calls and service area black-outs.
#9
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There is another option, it's what I do. I have a dual non GSM AT&T telephone for within the United States. When I travel I have a triband GSM with an AT&T sim in it for use out of the country. Same number, etc. Yes there is a monthly fee ($8 or so) and yess the per call charges are up there (though not sky high), but having one number here and over there, as well as still having a telephone that can go analog over here when I am out of reach of a digital tower) makes it worth it to me.
#10


Join Date: May 2000
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<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Originally posted by cordelli:
There is another option, it's what I do. I have a dual non GSM AT&T telephone for within the United States. When I travel I have a triband GSM with an AT&T sim in it for use out of the country. Same number, etc. Yes there is a monthly fee ($8 or so) and yess the per call charges are up there (though not sky high), but having one number here and over there, as well as still having a telephone that can go analog over here when I am out of reach of a digital tower) makes it worth it to me.</font>
There is another option, it's what I do. I have a dual non GSM AT&T telephone for within the United States. When I travel I have a triband GSM with an AT&T sim in it for use out of the country. Same number, etc. Yes there is a monthly fee ($8 or so) and yess the per call charges are up there (though not sky high), but having one number here and over there, as well as still having a telephone that can go analog over here when I am out of reach of a digital tower) makes it worth it to me.</font>
cordelli has already covered the advantages. Let me cover the disadvantages:
- Inbound calls to your GSM phone go from your home switch first to the UK and then to whereever your mobile is. So, if you're in Singapore and receive a call from your US number, your account will be charged a call forwarding call (including int'l long distance) from the US to the UK, plus an international roaming call which has to include not only the roaming payment to the Singapore GSM system, but the long distance charge to get the call from the UK to Singapore. This is one reason it costs more per minute as well as per month.
- Since the roaming service is a completely separate but connected service, lots of features don't work the same as they do at home. For example, voice mail takes 20 minutes or so to kick in after you turn off the phone. Also, things like call forwarding and especially SMS (text messaging) don't work, unless they've changed things recently.
I have both the above setup and the T-Mobile solution. With T-Mobile, not only are you using the same handset (if you want to), but it's roughly the same service worldwide, since the PCS 1900 standard that is used in North America is a variant of GSM. In my experience, all of the features work seamlessly, including voice mail, call forwarding, and text messaging. The big drawback is that the coverage within the US is less, especially since there's no analog roaming fallback. But, these days, unless you're in or travel to rural areas a lot, this may not be much an issue.
#11
Join Date: Mar 2003
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I'd suggest that there is no point in an AT&T non-GSM approach now. AT&T is changing over to GSM, so it is possible to have a single phone that works worldwide except for Japan. I have a phone (Siemens S46) that supports both multiband GSM and AT&T's old TDMA network, for maximum coverage. In practice, the only place it has had to drop back to TDMA has been Alaska.
The previous discussion on how the non-GSM network works may be correct, but with the newer service, it's transparent. The charges are a little higher than T-Mobile. On a recent European trip, I was paying $1.27/min., while T-Mobile would have been $.99.
The previous discussion on how the non-GSM network works may be correct, but with the newer service, it's transparent. The charges are a little higher than T-Mobile. On a recent European trip, I was paying $1.27/min., while T-Mobile would have been $.99.
#13
Original Poster


Join Date: Apr 1999
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Posts: 6,122
Interesting discussion. It gets complicated
.
It would seem that when ATT has changed over to GSM, it would be a strong competitor (does anyone know when this will occur?).
I spoke to Verizon. There are 2 puchase choices. 1)for $249 they will sell you a GSM triband (Motorola T280) with a SIMM installed. It requires a $10/mo 1 year contract. 2)just buy the SIMM for $10 and no $10/month, but $300 deposit. Either of these would work. Is the T280 decent, or is there something else out there that will accept a SIMM.
Thanks
Ed
.It would seem that when ATT has changed over to GSM, it would be a strong competitor (does anyone know when this will occur?).
I spoke to Verizon. There are 2 puchase choices. 1)for $249 they will sell you a GSM triband (Motorola T280) with a SIMM installed. It requires a $10/mo 1 year contract. 2)just buy the SIMM for $10 and no $10/month, but $300 deposit. Either of these would work. Is the T280 decent, or is there something else out there that will accept a SIMM.
Thanks
Ed
#14


Join Date: May 2000
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Regarding AT&T's cutover from their old system (800Mhz analog and/or TDMA) to PCS 1900 (the North American GSM variant that operates in the 1900Mhz band) in the US, I think this is an ongoing project. In the city that my AT&T service is based in (not Houston), they've offered both services for at least a year. They contacted me and tried to get me to switch to PCS 1900, but I opted to keep my old service for variety as my other service is already on a PCS 1900 network (through T-Mobile).
I suspect that Vulcan and Napa are correct in that if you have the PCS 1900 variant of AT&T, the roaming situation in worldwide GSM markets is roughly the same as with T-Mobile from an engineering point of view.
I still suspect that things are not as good if you have Verizon.
Regarding Japan, to my knowledge they currently have no service that's radio-compatible with any other country. Verizon is the only carrier that touts Japan roaming, but they do so with a dedicated Japanese handset that must be rented or purchased separately that they somehow tie in to your home service. I suspect that there are limitations in functionality, such as SMS perhaps not working, and almost certainly call forwarding and voice mail not working properly.
There is one other country that has its own proprietary radio standard: South Korea. To my knowledge, even though they have embracecd CDMA as a base digital standard, only a handset specifically designed for South Korea will work there. One thing that South Korea does have is that their primary carrier has South Korean handsets for rent that accept GSM SIMs. So, if you visit South Korea and have a GSM SIM, whether it be from a worldwide GSM market or a North American PCS 1900 market such as T-Mobile or the GSM AT&T, you can rent a handset that will accept your SIM but whose radio interface is South Korean.
I suspect that Vulcan and Napa are correct in that if you have the PCS 1900 variant of AT&T, the roaming situation in worldwide GSM markets is roughly the same as with T-Mobile from an engineering point of view.
I still suspect that things are not as good if you have Verizon.
Regarding Japan, to my knowledge they currently have no service that's radio-compatible with any other country. Verizon is the only carrier that touts Japan roaming, but they do so with a dedicated Japanese handset that must be rented or purchased separately that they somehow tie in to your home service. I suspect that there are limitations in functionality, such as SMS perhaps not working, and almost certainly call forwarding and voice mail not working properly.
There is one other country that has its own proprietary radio standard: South Korea. To my knowledge, even though they have embracecd CDMA as a base digital standard, only a handset specifically designed for South Korea will work there. One thing that South Korea does have is that their primary carrier has South Korean handsets for rent that accept GSM SIMs. So, if you visit South Korea and have a GSM SIM, whether it be from a worldwide GSM market or a North American PCS 1900 market such as T-Mobile or the GSM AT&T, you can rent a handset that will accept your SIM but whose radio interface is South Korean.
#15




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The South Korean network renting CDMA handsets that will accept GSM SIM's is SK Telecom. More info on that here:
http://www.sktelecom.co.kr/english/products_services/roaming_service/inbound_ro aming/index.html
Last I looked I think T-Mobile US was CLOSE to having a roaming agreement
BTW: No Japanese WCDMA network is yet offering a multinetwork phone for inbound roaming customers, so your choices are to rent a PHS phone, WCDMA (DoCoMo FOMA) or a CDMA2000 phone from J-Phone
Also SK Telecom does allow CDMA roaming handsets on to their system. Both China Unicom CDMA and Hutchison CDMA (HK) work fine. Some S. American CDMA networks appear to work as well.
[This message has been edited by NickP 1K (edited 05-20-2003).]
http://www.sktelecom.co.kr/english/products_services/roaming_service/inbound_ro aming/index.html
Last I looked I think T-Mobile US was CLOSE to having a roaming agreement
BTW: No Japanese WCDMA network is yet offering a multinetwork phone for inbound roaming customers, so your choices are to rent a PHS phone, WCDMA (DoCoMo FOMA) or a CDMA2000 phone from J-Phone
Also SK Telecom does allow CDMA roaming handsets on to their system. Both China Unicom CDMA and Hutchison CDMA (HK) work fine. Some S. American CDMA networks appear to work as well.
[This message has been edited by NickP 1K (edited 05-20-2003).]




