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David Stanley Ford

Roaming abroad can call up i-Popping bills

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS    Comments Comment on this article2
Published: September 29, 2009

CANCUN, Mexico — An inventory for a trip to a tropical beach could read like this:

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→Swimsuit, check.

→Sunscreen, check.

→Passport, check.

→And iPhone, check.

Well, make that a possibly giant check, drawn from your bank account. Unaware travelers can blithely rack up eye-popping bills on their iPhones while traveling abroad.

The international roaming calling rates are bad enough, but data usage is what really delivers the sting. The root of the problem is that the iPhone, with all its apps, positively inhales data. Because domestic plans feature unlimited data, few users bother to track the amount they send and receive.

When you travel to a foreign country, this cheap smorgasbord of bits and bytes becomes a pricey a la carte menu. Worst case scenario, you don’t sign up for any international plan and use your phone as you would at home, checking e-mail, sending photos and adjusting your fantasy football roster from the beach while enjoying an ice-cold beer and taunting your friends in chillier climates.

When you get home, the bill could be hundreds or thousands of dollars.

Manually decrease functionality
There are some steps you can take to maintain some of the functionality of the phone without the monster bill, but it will still cost you extra.

First off, learn how to defang the functions of your iPhone that can whack your wallet: international calling and data. The easiest way to completely shut these off (other than turning off the phone) is to go into flight mode. But that leaves you with a virtually useless phone that can’t make or receive calls, check e-mail or text.

To be more selective, go to "Settings,” then "General” and then "Network.” Here you can shut off "Data Roaming” so you won’t feast on high-priced data but can still make phone calls.

Also, in your e-mail settings, turn off the "Fetch” option so you won’t automatically download e-mail. Do so under "Settings,” then "Mail, Contacts, Calendars” and "Fetch New Data.”

There are a few options for international calling plans, which bring down the cost of making or receiving calls while abroad. I used the AT&T Mexico add-on plan for $4.99 a month for a recent trip, thereby qualifying for a calling rate of 59 cents per minute rather than 99 cents.

Incoming calls that go to voice mail also cost. And, in an amazing double-whammy, "Visual Voicemail” uses data to deliver the messages while also charging you international airtime for the duration of your friend’s meandering message.

If you’d like to check e-mail, view maps or update Facebook with the iPhone, you should probably also sign up for an international data plan. The cheapest is the $24.99 Global Add-On plan, which gives you 20 megabytes of data at $1.25 per megabyte. That compares to nearly $20 per megabyte if you don’t have an international plan. There are other options going up in price and amount of data available.

Before using your iPhone in another country, you also should reset your usage statistics so you can track how close you are to your limit. Go to "Settings,” then "General” and "Usage.” The reset option is at the bottom. Also on the same page, there is a listing for "Cellular Network Data.” This can grow at an astounding speed.

If you happen to be staying somewhere with wireless Internet access, use Skype or another Internet phone service for all voice calls and use the wireless network to surf the Web and check e-mail.

With some care, your iPhone can make a wonderful travel companion, but don’t expect it to deliver quite as much as it does at home as cheaply.

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David Stanley Ford





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Doug is right. Leave it at home. You can go to a internet cafe and check email. And the suggestion to purchase a sim locally is what my associates do who travel Europe, Mesopotamia, and Asia. They even tell us that the first thing we should do when we land is fine one of those crazy phone stores and buy a locally programmed phone. You can always use it on later trips if you return. Of course our boss has a Iridium phone. I don't even want to think what that costs but it works at the bottom of a mountain range.
Sparky (Mark), Oklahoma City - Sep 29, 2009 at 9:30 am
Or better yet, leave the iAnchor at home. Your going on a vacation. If you need a local cell phone get a cheap one that accepts a SIM card (unlike the iPhone) and get a local Pay-As-You-GO SIM from a local provider. Also remember, you pay for incoming calls even if you let them switch over to voice mail. Your phone rings, you pay.
Doug, Midwest City - Sep 29, 2009 at 6:22 am
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