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Click below to find interesting information from our December 2009 newsletter relating to:

Roaming
Travel
Mobile phones

Roaming 

Access codes 

At vRoam a large proportion of our technical support questions are "what number do I dial?".

One common problem are the prefixes (or "international access codes") you dial to tell the phone network you want to make an international call (rather than a local call). In Australia, most of us are used to dialling "0011" before the country-code for international calls.

However that doesn't work overseas. That's right, the prefix is different everywhere else (Australia is the only country to use "0011"). Regular vRoam travellers will be familiar with using "+" as a prefix on their mobile instead - mobile networks translate this automatically into the correct local prefix. This works when roaming and when home (so it's a good idea to enter numbers in your contacts list or address book in this international format).

But sometimes you may have to tell a contact how to call you (for instance you may want to tell a friend in the USA how to call your Australian number). Our advice would be first of all to give the "+" format (so for instance our Sydney office number would be "+61 2 9519 2258"). If they then ask "how do I dial the '+' from my landline?", you may need to find out the overseas access code.

Many countries use "00" as a prefix (this may become an international standard), but there are many, many other variants. For instance, North America uses "011", Japan uses "010", much of east Africa uses "000". Some require you to insert a desired carrier (e.g. Brazil "00xx" or Israel "01x" where "x" is a carrier selection code). Some even have two-stage dialling e.g. "8-wait-for-tone-10" for many central Asian countries.

So it's probably best to answer the question by saying "use '+' on a mobile from anywhere, 0011 from an Australian fixed line, and for other countries check with your carrier/phonebook".
 


Travel

Cutting corporate travel costs

In the current uncertain economic environment, many organisations are looking at their travel costs as a way to save money. Generally that involves either a reduction in demand, or a reduction in the cost of the service. A recent global survey of corporate travel departments shows the following top-four initiatives to reduce travel spend:

·         Advanced booking of airline tickets (57% or organisations, up from 55% in late 2008).

·         Rigorous enforcement of travel policy (52%, up from 44%).

·         Active tracking of unused tickets (45%, up from 44%).

·         Requiring pre-trip approval (44%, up from 43%).

To those, we'd add the suggestion of using vRoam to save 40% or more on their third-biggest international travel cost - global roaming.


Mobile phones

Consumer BlackBerries

The smartphone wars are well and truly underway. For consumers, Apple's iPhone rules for now, however RIM's BlackBerry series of handsets is making inroads from its mainly-corporate base.

A good example of this is the new BlackBerry Curve 8520. Sporting a touch-sensitive trackpad instead of the normal roller-ball navigation, enhanced media access (music controls, Facebook/IM/Flickr etc access), and at a low price point, it is an example of a push into non-corporate markets.

Other smartphone developments to watch for in 2010 are Android-based handsets. A few are available now, but many more models are in development by several manufacturers.

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