A Tip for Overseas Travelers: Leave Your Cellphones Home

By Brett Arends
Wall Street Journal

July 29, 2008 3:26 p.m.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121735292432893795.html?mod=hps_us_editors_picks


Anyone traveling abroad this summer must be reeling from shock. Places like 
Europe were expensive even in the old days. And that was before the 
Almighty Dollar had become the Yankee Peso.

But your biggest sticker shock may not come until you get home and open 
your cellphone bill.

Cellphones are invaluable when you travel. It's fantastic to know that 
folks back home can reach you if they need to, no matter where you are. 
Gone are the days when Americans in Paris had to visit the American Express 
office near the Opera to hear that Aunt Jane had died.

But using a cellphone overseas can be cripplingly expensive. The roaming 
charges are eye-watering. I remember getting stung once for a three-figure 
sum over a long weekend.

So if you are about to travel abroad this summer, here's a money-saving tip.

Leave your cellphone at home.

Instead, use the Internet to route calls to a local prepaid cellphone in 
the country you're visiting. This sounds complicated, but it's surprisingly 
easy and can save you a fortune. I am currently in London and I just set it 
up myself.

Here's how:

Step 1: Before leaving the U.S., open an account with a Voice over Internet 
Protocol provider such as Skype (skype.com), Gizmo Project (gizmo5.com), or 
Truphone (truphone.com). These allow you to make and receive phone calls 
cheaply over the Internet. I've used all three of these services: They all 
seem fine. I'm particularly impressed by the value offered by Gizmo and 
Truphone. There are plenty of alternatives, as well.

Your VoIP account should also come with an ordinary U.S. landline phone 
number, letting people call you from a regular phone. (You may have to pay 
a small amount for this number). Give this to those who may need to reach 
you, and leave it on your voicemail as well.

Step Two: When you arrive at your overseas destination, buy a cheap prepaid 
cellphone. In Europe you can pick up a working local mobile on any shopping 
street. (Incidentally, from my experience, doing it this way seems much 
easier than trying to order a cellphone in advance over the Internet).

Alternatively, you may be able to use your U.S. cellphone with a local SIM 
card. But the phone will need to be a model that works on overseas 
networks. And you will need to get your U.S. cellular provider to "unlock" 
it so that it will accept SIM cards from other companies. Contact your U.S. 
provider for details.

Step Three: Get onto the Internet, log in to your VoIP account, and set it 
up to redirect all calls to your new prepaid cellphone number. Most VoIP 
services have his facility.

The result? If someone back home wants to reach you, they can simply call 
the regular, 10-digit U.S. phone number associated with your VoIP account. 
Their call will then automatically be routed, cheaply, via the Internet to 
your new cellphone.

How much it will cost will depend on which services you use and where you 
are. But it is likely to be cents per minute rather than dollars. Folks 
back home will only pay for the U.S. leg of the call.

I've just started experimenting with this and so far it's working well. My 
Wall Street Journal cellphone remains -- switched off -- in my suitcase. 
(Yes, I'm saving Mr. Murdoch money.)

This is not a technology column, but I'm always looking for ways technology 
can help people save money. I'd love to hear from readers who have also 
made this work, or who have other suggestions along similar lines.

Write to Brett Arends at [EMAIL PROTECTED]



================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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