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    T-Mobile Service in Canada

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    t-mobile mobile telephony canada
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    • bbigfordB
      bbigford @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

      That's what I was afraid of. I knew that they had a subsidiary here in Romania. They have brick and mortar stores even in Kosovo. Canada just gets the worst of everything.

      I hear good things about their health care... 😉

      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @bbigford
        last edited by

        @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

        @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

        That's what I was afraid of. I knew that they had a subsidiary here in Romania. They have brick and mortar stores even in Kosovo. Canada just gets the worst of everything.

        I hear good things about their health care... 😉

        Not compared to Europe, just compared to the US.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • bbigfordB
          bbigford
          last edited by

          What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @bbigford
            last edited by

            @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

            What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

            Yeah. Has to get local SIMs in every country that he visits. Which is doable, but a pain.

            DashrenderD MattSpellerM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • DashrenderD
              Dashrender @scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

              @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

              What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

              Yeah. Has to get local SIMs in every country that he visits. Which is doable, but a pain.

              So T-mobile is great for the traveler, but not for the person trying to reach them if they don't originate from the same country where the traveler originated from. It will likely be long distance if not international long distance to call the traveler for everywhere but the travelers country of purchase origin.

              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                last edited by

                @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

                Yeah. Has to get local SIMs in every country that he visits. Which is doable, but a pain.

                So T-mobile is great for the traveler, but not for the person trying to reach them if they don't originate from the same country where the traveler originated from. It will likely be long distance if not international long distance to call the traveler for everywhere but the travelers country of purchase origin.

                Who calls travellers with numbers from the country that they are in? Basically no one. I've never had that need before. When do you picture that happening? You need calls from people who know your number, not from people whom you have never met.

                And if you get a SIM card in a new country you get a new, random number and people never know when you are on which number... which means you have no reliable means to be reached by anyone unless they try several numbers.

                DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • J
                  Jason Banned
                  last edited by

                  T-Mobile has no coverage anywhere around here, and the one area you can get it it's just EDGE. Every other carrier is LTE around here. T-Mobile is also a "non-standard" GSM because the bands they use aren't in many phones so you have to get a special model to use them.

                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @Jason
                    last edited by

                    @Jason said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                    T-Mobile has no coverage anywhere around here, and the one area you can get it it's just EDGE. Every other carrier is LTE around here. T-Mobile is also a "non-standard" GSM because the bands they use aren't in many phones so you have to get a special model to use them.

                    No special models needed here.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                      @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                      @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                      @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                      What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

                      Yeah. Has to get local SIMs in every country that he visits. Which is doable, but a pain.

                      So T-mobile is great for the traveler, but not for the person trying to reach them if they don't originate from the same country where the traveler originated from. It will likely be long distance if not international long distance to call the traveler for everywhere but the travelers country of purchase origin.

                      Who calls travellers with numbers from the country that they are in? Basically no one. I've never had that need before. When do you picture that happening? You need calls from people who know your number, not from people whom you have never met.

                      And if you get a SIM card in a new country you get a new, random number and people never know when you are on which number... which means you have no reliable means to be reached by anyone unless they try several numbers.

                      You've missed what I was saying.

                      Say I have a T-Mobile USA number and travel to Germany, hanging out with German friends. When those friends, in Germany want to call me, they now have to call an international long distance number.

                      You're absolutely right that there is not global solution to this short of ditching phone numbers (more specifically - locality) all together, which of course we already have with the likes of Skype (most mobile platforms) and Facetime (limited to iDevices).

                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                        last edited by

                        @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                        @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                        @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                        @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                        @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                        What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

                        Yeah. Has to get local SIMs in every country that he visits. Which is doable, but a pain.

                        So T-mobile is great for the traveler, but not for the person trying to reach them if they don't originate from the same country where the traveler originated from. It will likely be long distance if not international long distance to call the traveler for everywhere but the travelers country of purchase origin.

                        Who calls travellers with numbers from the country that they are in? Basically no one. I've never had that need before. When do you picture that happening? You need calls from people who know your number, not from people whom you have never met.

                        And if you get a SIM card in a new country you get a new, random number and people never know when you are on which number... which means you have no reliable means to be reached by anyone unless they try several numbers.

                        You've missed what I was saying.

                        Say I have a T-Mobile USA number and travel to Germany, hanging out with German friends. When those friends, in Germany want to call me, they now have to call an international long distance number.

                        You're absolutely right that there is not global solution to this short of ditching phone numbers (more specifically - locality) all together, which of course we already have with the likes of Skype (most mobile platforms) and Facetime (limited to iDevices).

                        I didn't miss it at all. Just pointed out why there isn't an alternative. If you look at what I said, it was in direct response to that. I also pointed out that people you meet in other countries don't call you, that's just not a normal thing. One that people in other countries don't speak your language and phones calls are the most problematic form of communications, two because travellers have time zone issues so phone calling gets reduced for that reason, three because they never know if you are on their SIM or another one so their local number is unreliable as a means of communications and four because you simply rarely need to get calls from people where you are local. I live in places I travel to and this never comes up, for people travelling to a place for a few days it is so much more rare.

                        People outside of the US have to deal with these issues constantly and use tools like WhatsApp and Telegram to ensure that things are always free.

                        DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • DashrenderD
                          Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                          @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                          @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                          @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                          @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                          @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                          What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

                          Yeah. Has to get local SIMs in every country that he visits. Which is doable, but a pain.

                          So T-mobile is great for the traveler, but not for the person trying to reach them if they don't originate from the same country where the traveler originated from. It will likely be long distance if not international long distance to call the traveler for everywhere but the travelers country of purchase origin.

                          Who calls travellers with numbers from the country that they are in? Basically no one. I've never had that need before. When do you picture that happening? You need calls from people who know your number, not from people whom you have never met.

                          And if you get a SIM card in a new country you get a new, random number and people never know when you are on which number... which means you have no reliable means to be reached by anyone unless they try several numbers.

                          You've missed what I was saying.

                          Say I have a T-Mobile USA number and travel to Germany, hanging out with German friends. When those friends, in Germany want to call me, they now have to call an international long distance number.

                          You're absolutely right that there is not global solution to this short of ditching phone numbers (more specifically - locality) all together, which of course we already have with the likes of Skype (most mobile platforms) and Facetime (limited to iDevices).

                          I didn't miss it at all. Just pointed out why there isn't an alternative. If you look at what I said, it was in direct response to that. I also pointed out that people you meet in other countries don't call you, that's just not a normal thing. One that people in other countries don't speak your language and phones calls are the most problematic form of communications, two because travellers have time zone issues so phone calling gets reduced for that reason, three because they never know if you are on their SIM or another one so their local number is unreliable as a means of communications and four because you simply rarely need to get calls from people where you are local. I live in places I travel to and this never comes up, for people travelling to a place for a few days it is so much more rare.

                          People outside of the US have to deal with these issues constantly and use tools like WhatsApp and Telegram to ensure that things are always free.

                          I'll give you that voice communication is probably rare, but for me personally, most everyone I deal with, and certainly those who I want/need to stay in communications with while I'm the traveler, speak the same language as me. So while we might not use voice, we'll use texting - but that's solvable with any number of instant messaging apps out there, assuming you use one in common.

                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                            last edited by

                            @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                            @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                            @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                            @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                            @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                            @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                            @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                            What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

                            Yeah. Has to get local SIMs in every country that he visits. Which is doable, but a pain.

                            So T-mobile is great for the traveler, but not for the person trying to reach them if they don't originate from the same country where the traveler originated from. It will likely be long distance if not international long distance to call the traveler for everywhere but the travelers country of purchase origin.

                            Who calls travellers with numbers from the country that they are in? Basically no one. I've never had that need before. When do you picture that happening? You need calls from people who know your number, not from people whom you have never met.

                            And if you get a SIM card in a new country you get a new, random number and people never know when you are on which number... which means you have no reliable means to be reached by anyone unless they try several numbers.

                            You've missed what I was saying.

                            Say I have a T-Mobile USA number and travel to Germany, hanging out with German friends. When those friends, in Germany want to call me, they now have to call an international long distance number.

                            You're absolutely right that there is not global solution to this short of ditching phone numbers (more specifically - locality) all together, which of course we already have with the likes of Skype (most mobile platforms) and Facetime (limited to iDevices).

                            I didn't miss it at all. Just pointed out why there isn't an alternative. If you look at what I said, it was in direct response to that. I also pointed out that people you meet in other countries don't call you, that's just not a normal thing. One that people in other countries don't speak your language and phones calls are the most problematic form of communications, two because travellers have time zone issues so phone calling gets reduced for that reason, three because they never know if you are on their SIM or another one so their local number is unreliable as a means of communications and four because you simply rarely need to get calls from people where you are local. I live in places I travel to and this never comes up, for people travelling to a place for a few days it is so much more rare.

                            People outside of the US have to deal with these issues constantly and use tools like WhatsApp and Telegram to ensure that things are always free.

                            I'll give you that voice communication is probably rare, but for me personally, most everyone I deal with, and certainly those who I want/need to stay in communications with while I'm the traveler, speak the same language as me. So while we might not use voice, we'll use texting - but that's solvable with any number of instant messaging apps out there, assuming you use one in common.

                            Texting is free with T-Mobile, though. So as long as you don't want to do voice, you are covered with them.

                            DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • DashrenderD
                              Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                              @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                              @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                              @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                              @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                              @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                              @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                              @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                              What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

                              Yeah. Has to get local SIMs in every country that he visits. Which is doable, but a pain.

                              So T-mobile is great for the traveler, but not for the person trying to reach them if they don't originate from the same country where the traveler originated from. It will likely be long distance if not international long distance to call the traveler for everywhere but the travelers country of purchase origin.

                              Who calls travellers with numbers from the country that they are in? Basically no one. I've never had that need before. When do you picture that happening? You need calls from people who know your number, not from people whom you have never met.

                              And if you get a SIM card in a new country you get a new, random number and people never know when you are on which number... which means you have no reliable means to be reached by anyone unless they try several numbers.

                              You've missed what I was saying.

                              Say I have a T-Mobile USA number and travel to Germany, hanging out with German friends. When those friends, in Germany want to call me, they now have to call an international long distance number.

                              You're absolutely right that there is not global solution to this short of ditching phone numbers (more specifically - locality) all together, which of course we already have with the likes of Skype (most mobile platforms) and Facetime (limited to iDevices).

                              I didn't miss it at all. Just pointed out why there isn't an alternative. If you look at what I said, it was in direct response to that. I also pointed out that people you meet in other countries don't call you, that's just not a normal thing. One that people in other countries don't speak your language and phones calls are the most problematic form of communications, two because travellers have time zone issues so phone calling gets reduced for that reason, three because they never know if you are on their SIM or another one so their local number is unreliable as a means of communications and four because you simply rarely need to get calls from people where you are local. I live in places I travel to and this never comes up, for people travelling to a place for a few days it is so much more rare.

                              People outside of the US have to deal with these issues constantly and use tools like WhatsApp and Telegram to ensure that things are always free.

                              I'll give you that voice communication is probably rare, but for me personally, most everyone I deal with, and certainly those who I want/need to stay in communications with while I'm the traveler, speak the same language as me. So while we might not use voice, we'll use texting - but that's solvable with any number of instant messaging apps out there, assuming you use one in common.

                              Texting is free with T-Mobile, though. So as long as you don't want to do voice, you are covered with them.

                              LOL, the whole point was that it's not free for non T-Mobile users. 🙂

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                last edited by

                                @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                @BBigford said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                What does your friend use currently? A semi-local Canadian carrier and multiple SIMs with various extra charges?

                                Yeah. Has to get local SIMs in every country that he visits. Which is doable, but a pain.

                                So T-mobile is great for the traveler, but not for the person trying to reach them if they don't originate from the same country where the traveler originated from. It will likely be long distance if not international long distance to call the traveler for everywhere but the travelers country of purchase origin.

                                Who calls travellers with numbers from the country that they are in? Basically no one. I've never had that need before. When do you picture that happening? You need calls from people who know your number, not from people whom you have never met.

                                And if you get a SIM card in a new country you get a new, random number and people never know when you are on which number... which means you have no reliable means to be reached by anyone unless they try several numbers.

                                You've missed what I was saying.

                                Say I have a T-Mobile USA number and travel to Germany, hanging out with German friends. When those friends, in Germany want to call me, they now have to call an international long distance number.

                                You're absolutely right that there is not global solution to this short of ditching phone numbers (more specifically - locality) all together, which of course we already have with the likes of Skype (most mobile platforms) and Facetime (limited to iDevices).

                                I didn't miss it at all. Just pointed out why there isn't an alternative. If you look at what I said, it was in direct response to that. I also pointed out that people you meet in other countries don't call you, that's just not a normal thing. One that people in other countries don't speak your language and phones calls are the most problematic form of communications, two because travellers have time zone issues so phone calling gets reduced for that reason, three because they never know if you are on their SIM or another one so their local number is unreliable as a means of communications and four because you simply rarely need to get calls from people where you are local. I live in places I travel to and this never comes up, for people travelling to a place for a few days it is so much more rare.

                                People outside of the US have to deal with these issues constantly and use tools like WhatsApp and Telegram to ensure that things are always free.

                                I'll give you that voice communication is probably rare, but for me personally, most everyone I deal with, and certainly those who I want/need to stay in communications with while I'm the traveler, speak the same language as me. So while we might not use voice, we'll use texting - but that's solvable with any number of instant messaging apps out there, assuming you use one in common.

                                Texting is free with T-Mobile, though. So as long as you don't want to do voice, you are covered with them.

                                LOL, the whole point was that it's not free for non T-Mobile users. 🙂

                                But people OUTSIDE of the US already use free text alternatives because they have this problem with everyone. Using actual texting is really just a US (and sub saharan Africa) thing.

                                So it only applies to situations where it is free for T-Mobile users.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  Your point was that you felt that the T-Mobile solution was not great for people trying to reach them from non-T-Mobile countries. And my point is that it is, as the things you are thinking of do not apply. people in those countries generally deal with this every day, even as non-travellers, and have it solved. It's only communications "back home" that the phone number components are useful and they work great.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • DashrenderD
                                    Dashrender
                                    last edited by

                                    Yeah - I hadn't considered that most users in Europe would have already solved this problem because as you mention the likeliness of needing international contact is so much higher there.

                                    That also explains why What's App adoption is SOO much higher in Europe than the US.

                                    scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • scottalanmillerS
                                      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                      last edited by

                                      @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                      Yeah - I hadn't considered that most users in Europe would have already solved this problem because as you mention the likeliness of needing international contact is so much higher there.

                                      That also explains why What's App adoption is SOO much higher in Europe than the US.

                                      It's not just the international connections, it's the constant changing of SIMs so that no one has a steady phone number. Anyone who travels without T-Mobile, more or less, either goes without service or has to get a temporary number when travelling which breaks nearly everything. It's common in much of the world to flip SIMs constantly to get the best rates or coverage. In the Philippines they do this even on the islands all just to get better deals for different usage.

                                      The SIM changing thing has effectively destroyed the usefulness of the traditional phone number and with it, phone calls and texting for regular contact in these areas.

                                      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • DashrenderD
                                        Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by

                                        @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                        @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                        Yeah - I hadn't considered that most users in Europe would have already solved this problem because as you mention the likeliness of needing international contact is so much higher there.

                                        That also explains why What's App adoption is SOO much higher in Europe than the US.

                                        It's not just the international connections, it's the constant changing of SIMs so that no one has a steady phone number. Anyone who travels without T-Mobile, more or less, either goes without service or has to get a temporary number when travelling which breaks nearly everything. It's common in much of the world to flip SIMs constantly to get the best rates or coverage. In the Philippines they do this even on the islands all just to get better deals for different usage.

                                        The SIM changing thing has effectively destroyed the usefulness of the traditional phone number and with it, phone calls and texting for regular contact in these areas.

                                        Hasn't this been a problem for cell phones in Europe and places where people have to move between vendors/countries since the beginning? So really the nice thing now, you can easily move away from this problem with data and a hosted PBX solution (assuming you need voice), otherwise messaging through any number of apps solves that problem.

                                        Sure you still have to deal with the hassle of the changing SIMs to get data at a good price, but the number part can go away.

                                        thwrT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          Yes, for those who have struggled to have access to a common, portable number, that is true. Although really I think phone number alternatives, like Skype, are the big winners here.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • thwrT
                                            thwr @Dashrender
                                            last edited by thwr

                                            @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                            @scottalanmiller said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                            @Dashrender said in T-Mobile Service in Canada:

                                            Yeah - I hadn't considered that most users in Europe would have already solved this problem because as you mention the likeliness of needing international contact is so much higher there.

                                            That also explains why What's App adoption is SOO much higher in Europe than the US.

                                            It's not just the international connections, it's the constant changing of SIMs so that no one has a steady phone number. Anyone who travels without T-Mobile, more or less, either goes without service or has to get a temporary number when travelling which breaks nearly everything. It's common in much of the world to flip SIMs constantly to get the best rates or coverage. In the Philippines they do this even on the islands all just to get better deals for different usage.

                                            The SIM changing thing has effectively destroyed the usefulness of the traditional phone number and with it, phone calls and texting for regular contact in these areas.

                                            Hasn't this been a problem for cell phones in Europe and places where people have to move between vendors/countries since the beginning? So really the nice thing now, you can easily move away from this problem with data and a hosted PBX solution (assuming you need voice), otherwise messaging through any number of apps solves that problem.

                                            Sure you still have to deal with the hassle of the changing SIMs to get data at a good price, but the number part can go away.

                                            It's not that much of a problem in the EU (remember: EU != Europe) anymore because we finally got free roaming within all member states.

                                            https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union_roaming_regulations
                                            https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/oct/27/europe-abolishes-mobile-phone-roaming-charges

                                            DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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