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Click below to find interesting information from our March 2010 newsletter relating to:

Roaming
Travel
Mobile phones

Roaming 

EU Roaming Caps 

Starting this month (and fully implemented by July), EU residents roaming throughout Europe will have their mobile service cut off once they have incurred 50 Euros (or a customer-set limit) of roaming expenses.

The new EU regulation is designed to avoid increasingly-common "bill shocks" caused by unintended usage of high-priced roaming calls and data. Travellers have to contact their carrier once cut off, acknowledge that they understand the roaming prices being charged and are then re-connected.

Although this highlights the often-unexpectedly high cost of roaming, it will have no effect on Australian travellers as it is an internal EU regulation only. Australian travellers to Europe (and elsewhere) will still be paying high roaming costs and facing exceptional bills when they return.


 


Travel

South Africa World Cup

It is less than 100 days until the start of the next World Cup (June 11th is the first kick-off, although Australia's first Group D match against Germany is on June13th in Durban).

There have been reports that crowd numbers are likely to be less than capacity as advance ticket sales have been slow. This has been attributed to high prices for internal airfares (the venues are in cities that require some travel) and hotel rooms.

Not mentioned so far is the cost of telecommunications, however at vRoam we know travellers to sporting events rely on their mobiles extensively and would (if roaming) face bills of many hundreds of dollars on their return. At vRoam, not content with saving our customers large amounts on their calls (our vSIM rates are just $1.10 per minute to call back to Australia, instead of Optus' $5.50), but for travellers to the World Cup in June/July vRoam will offer free rentals. To obtain this special offer, simply add the code "World Cup" to your vSIM order.

Stop press: World Cup SIMs

Travellers to the soccer World Cup in South Africa in mid-2010 who have been planning to collect pre-paid SIMs on arrival may find themselves incommunicado. South Africa now requires full user identification of pre-paid SIM cards, including South African identity numbers.

vRoam vSIM cards roaming in South Africa are unaffected. Stay in touch at the World Cup!


Mobile phones

Micro SIMs

Apple recently launched their new iPad tablet device, running a version of the iPhone software. In common with the iPhone, the iPad includes a SIM card for connectivity over the wireless networks (in the case of the iPad, we suspect more for data services than voice).

The iPad SIM is actually a format that has not ben seen on these shores previously. Called a "Micro-SIM", it is smaller than the standard "Mini-SIM" (which therefore won't fit into an iPad).

However the electrical contacts are the same dimensions as, and the electrical properties are also identical to a normal mini-SIM - the external dimensions are the only difference.

Theoretically, a normal Mini-SIM could be cut down to the size of a Micro-SIM and would work (the chip inside a SIM is under the gold-plated contacts, so cutting the plastic surrounds will not disable the SIM). You would need some tools, patience and a good eye; most users will not cut into their SIMs, we'd guess.

Australian carriers (Telstra, Optus, Vodafone) have said they will fast-track Micro-SIMs, presumably to have stock when the iPad launches into Australia. If you plan on purchasing an iPad, just be aware that you will need a new Micro-SIM as well.

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