![]() |
|
|
|
Registered
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: the beach
Posts: 5,149
|
Cell phone in Sweden
I'm going to Sweden this summer. I need to stay in touch with the family in California through voice and texting. Will my iphone work without any preparations? Or do I have to make special arrangements? What about roaming charges?
__________________
Charlie 1966 912 Polo Red 1950 VW Bug 1983 VW Westfalia; 1989 VW Syncro Tristar Doka |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Lake Cle Elum - Eastern WA.
Posts: 8,417
|
Put a Skype App on your Iphone and sign up for Sweden. Just a few cents a minute.....Think you can text free with Google Voice.
If you can't access internet thru your data plan, can do it thru Wi-Fi
__________________
Bob S. 73.5 911T 1969 911T Coo' pay (one owner) 1960 Mercedes 190SL 1962 XKE Roadster (sold) - 13 motorcycles |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
I don't know about Sweden, but my iPhone worked fine it Italy, France, and Denmark. I don't know about charges, as I never saw the bill.
__________________
. |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Glorious Pac NW
Posts: 4,184
|
GSM is a standard, and even though the US didn't implement quite the same as the rest of the world, any quad-band GSM phone works fine - for voice - anywhere there is GSM service. Which rules out parts of Asia and Africa where the only services available are from the older equipment we decomm'd, but developed countries should be fine.
You may need to enable international roaming with your carrier for your phone to work abroad. This is probably no-charge - because the carrier makes plenty of money (mine charges $1 per minute) on the calls you make/receive. If you can bear this price, it's the most convenient - because your "real" phone # Just Works. Be aware you need to add/dial "+1" in front of regular US phone #'s for them to work (and the phone/operator is smart enough to use that to dial the international dialing code). All the phone #'s in my phone all have the appropriate country codes... Beware data charges on international roaming rates. These can run into $1,000's of $$$ (one guy famously ran up something like $50,000 in a week on a cruise ship just off the coast). Make sure you know what your charges are/how to disable data when you don't need it. Depending on the frequencies your phone is using for data (which depends on which US carrier it was originally supplied by), you almost certainly won't get 3G speeds anyway (different radio frequencies), and will be limited to GPRS/EDGE. If your phone were carrier unlocked, you would have the option to remove the US SIM and buy a local pay-as-you-go SIM - but you're probably not that interested in making local calls; costs for international calls on that SIM would vary by plan; a pay-as-you-go plan wouldn't give the greatest rates - but probably still cheaper than $1 a minute. Some carriers will provide the PUK to carrier-unlock freely (T-Mobile will give it out once your account has been 90 days in good standing), or it can be achieved by other methods. I'm told that AT&T don't like to give it out, ever. On an iPhone, I think you need to jailbreak to remove the carrier locking in any case. VoIP application like Vonage or Skype is probably best for calling - but you probably only want to use these/may only work properly (due to data rates) on WiFi.
__________________
'77 S with '78 930 power and a few other things. |
||
![]() |
|
<insert witty title here>
|
An iphone disables data roaming by default, so if you don't want the additional charges, you don't have to do anything. I looked into roaming plans and costs for a trip to Florida, and it was disgustingly expensive. I would imagine Europe would be twice as much. Though US-based cell providers are much more reasonable in price than Canadian ones, so it may be decently priced. You'll have to go into the settings and enable data roaming.
We're going to spain this summer, and our travel agent recommended buying a SIM card once there. She said that's the most cost effective way of using voice or data. Though if the hotel has wifi, and we are ok with containing data/phone usage to the hotel room, then that's probably the cheapest way to go.
__________________
Current: 1987 911 cabrio Past: 1972 911t 3.0, 1986 911, 1983 944, 1999 Boxster |
||
![]() |
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: N. Phoenix AZ USA
Posts: 28,943
|
Make sure your cell is a GSM then have fun, or go there, buy a SIM chip and cheap phone and use that. We do that all the time when out of the country.
__________________
2013 Jag XF, 2002 Dodge Ram 2500 Cummins (the workhorse), 1992 Jaguar XJ S-3 V-12 VDP (one of only 100 examples made), 1969 Jaguar XJ (been in the family since new), 1985 911 Targa backdated to 1973 RS specs with a 3.6 shoehorned in the back, 1959 Austin Healey Sprite (former SCCA H-Prod), 1995 BMW R1100RSL, 1971 & '72 BMW R75/5 "Toaster," Ural Tourist w/sidecar, 1949 Aeronca Sedan / QB |
||
![]() |
|
![]() |