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vRoam News

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

Roaming
Travel
Mobile phones

Roaming 

Roaming Voicemail 

At vRoam, we've never charged three times for a voicemail.

Most travellers don't realise that they are charged three times for voicemail when roaming using their normal Australian SIM: once (as a received call whilst abroad, again (as an outbound call from the visited country) to deposit the voicemail and a third time to retrieve the message.

This is called "voicemail tromboning" and results in costs for a voicemail being as much as $15 per minute or more: one of the great hidden costs of roaming, that can account for a large portion of your bill.

The EU has now legislated that from July 1st 2010, travellers can't be charged for having a voicemail deposited whilst roaming in another EU country.

Unfortunately whilst the EU regulation helps Europeans travelling in Europe, it won't help Australians at all, who will still pay for voicemail tromboning (everywhere, including Europe) while roaming, except for those using vRoam's SIMs.
 


Travel

Plane Talking

As mobile coverage during flight is increasingly becoming a reality instead of pure concept, there is now an etiquette push to avoid loud talking in-flight.

A recent on-line survey conducted by FCm Travel revealed that travellers are of the opinion that keeping in contact while flying should only be done through texting and email.

"Texting and emailing is pretty unobtrusive but when it comes to voice calls, it seems that few travellers want to be stuck next to someone talking shop for two hours straight or divulging details of their personal life" says Chris Preston, FCm Travel Marketing Manager Australia.

In the FCm Travel survey, 44% of corporate travellers surveyed didn't approve of any wireless connectivity during flight, 47% said texting and emailing were fine but no talking, while 8% were happy for travellers to talk, text or email during flight.

Of course, all these activities can blow your travel budget as in-flight mobile use is a form of global roaming, yet charged at even higher rates than the already-high in-country roaming prices.


Mobile phones

Brighter Phones

One of the trends in mobile phone handsets is brighter displays. Traditionally, LCD colour screens used a lot of battery power, and were not particularly bright (because the light power is turned down to lengthen the battery life). The screens are back-lit, which means most of the light is blocked (and wasted) by the display, which only lets through the amount and colour needed.

A new type of display technology is now appearing on mobiles. Called AMOLED (Active-Matrix Organic Light Emitting Diode), it is ultra-thin and bright, yet uses less power than normal LCDs (it also handles faster refresh rates, so has less blurring). The key to the technology is that each pixel emits its own light (rather than blocking or filtering a back-light).

Handset manufacturers are now bringing out their first models with AMOLED displays, and we expect them to become widespread over the next couple of years.

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