Pingo – new way to make cheap calls via your iPhone to anywhere in the world
I’ve been using a great new service to make very inexpensive international calls from my iPhone. You can make calls from any phone. I’ve written about this before. Check this out. Pingo.com is the cheapest way to make international. A native iPhone app uses your iPhone contact database — very cool! Pingo EZ Dial also work on Andriod and Blackberry.You can find all the rates here, e.g. 2cents p/m to call to UK landlines from the US.Do you know of another cheaper way to make international calls from your iPhone?
Read MoreMXit launches iPhone app
MXit is a South African social networking company with 12 million subscribers around the world. According to MXit it is “a next generation Mobile Instant Messenger that connects you to a world of expression, using both instant messaging and social networking.”
MXit recently launched an iPhone app. I’ve been a beta user for a few weeks. With MXit you can send 1,000 character multi-media messages (MMS) to your MXit, Yahoo!, MSN, Gtalk, AIM or ICQ buddies. It seems to work well, although I still cannot get my AIM and Gtalk accounts to work. Yahoo IM works great! In summary: It works well, however this first version is still too buggy. I’m sure the MXit guys will update it quickly.MXit is also available on most mobile phones running Java, Blackberry, Windows Mobile and they have a PC beta version. You can win ~$10k (ZAR100,000) for developing the best PC MXit client. So get cracking…MXit is a great way to send free or low cost messages to friends around the world. Different from Fring and Skype it doesn’t provide VOIP calling capability.I would like to know your experience with MXit especially if you live in North or South America. Read MoreCheapest international call rates from your iPhone
These days you can make really cheap international calls directly from your iPhone. I’ve used VIP, Jajah, ATT Wireless, Skype and Google Voice. All these services will use your mobile minutes, with the expection of Skype’s iPhone app in WiFi mode. In this post I’ll give my experience with each service from a cost and ease-of-use perspective. I would love to hear about your experiences in the comments.Here goes…
- VIP has many low cost rate plans available. I’ve used VIP for many years and it continues to be my fall back provider. It’s not very user friendly to use, i.e., no integration with the iPhone’s Contacts app. You have to dail a tollfree number and then you can dail your international number.
- Jajah has an iPhone dailer web app that works well. You can add contacts to you Jajah address book via the Jajah.com web site. Unfortunately Jajah’s iPhone app doesn’t integrate with the iPhone’s Contacts app. Jajah on the iPhone only works when you are in 3G or/and WiFi mode.
- ATT Wireless: Adding ATT’s $5.99 p/m World Connect service to your plan allows you can make international calls directly with your iPhone’s Contacts app at much cheaper rates (e.g., 28c p/min to a UK mobile phone vs ATT’s standard $1.69 per min.). This is by far the most friendly solution although not the cheapest. ATT World Connect and Standard Rates lookup.
- Skype recently launched it’s own iPhone app. With the Skype app you can make FREE (only in WiFi mode) calls from your iPhone to any Skype user around the world. The rates below apply when make calls to landlines and mobile phones. Skype’s app works well and a huge plus is that it integrates directly with the iPhone’s Contacts app, so I don’t have to duplicate my contact info in Skype. Skype’s VOIP calling competes with Fring.com.
- Google Voice: In a previous post I wrote about Google’s new Voice service. Google Voice has the lowest rates for international calling! You can access the service in one of two ways: (1) Using Google’s mobile web site — also only works in WiFi and/or 3G mode, or (2) by calling your own Google Voice # and using voice prompts a-la VIP mentioned above. One great thing about Google Voice is that all my contacts are sync-ed with Google automatically using my Mac’s AddressBook. Calling from the mobile web site is fairly easy. Definitely not as easy as Skype or using World Connect.
This table compares call rates from the US to land lines in different countries (click on a title to sort each column):
Provider | UK | Germany | France | South Africa | Australia |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Google Voice | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.06 | 0.03 |
ATT Wireless (World Connect) | 0.08 | 0.09 | 0.09 | 0.36 | 0.09 |
ATT Wireless (Standard) | 1.49 | 1.49 | 1.49 | 2.69 | 3.49 |
VIP (SANZAR Economy Rate Plan) | 0.07 | 0.08 | 0.07 | 0.079 | 0.05 |
Jajah | 0.031 | 0.033 | 0.033 | 0.085 | 0.037 |
Skype (incl VAT) | 0.024 | 0.024 | 0.024 | 0.078 | 0.024 |
Provider | UK | Germany | France | South Africa | Australia |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Google Voice | 0.19 | 0.18 | 0.15 | 0.18 | 0.17 |
ATT Wireless (World Connect) | 0.28 | 0.26 | 0.22 | 0.53 | 0.24 |
ATT Wireless (Standard) | 1.69 | 1.66 | 1.62 | 2.86 | 3.64 |
VIP (SANZAR Economy Rate Plan) | 0.239 | 0.26 | 0.23 | 0.21 | 0.189 |
Jajah | 0.203 | 0.288 | 0.197 | 0.222 | 0.201 |
Skype (incl VAT) | 0.291 | 0.283 | 0.233 | 0.268 | 0.233 |
To summarize:
- Ease of use winner: ATT World Connect. For ease dailing you cannot beat dailing directly from your iPhone’s Contacts app. Skype is a close second, followed by Google Voice, Jajah and then VIP.
- Low cost winner: Google Voice is the cheapest. Skype is the cheapest (FREE) if you have access to WiFi.
- Overall winner: For me Google Voice is the overall winner — fairly easy to use and the cheapest rates. If cost was less of an issue then I would’ve picked ATT’s World Connect as the winner.
GrandCentral is now Google Voice
On March 11, 2009 GrandCentral finally became Google Voice. I’ve used GrandCentral since November 2006 and found it to be a very useful and reliable service. David Poque does a great job of explaining GrandCentral’s original “one number for life” approach. In July 2007 GrandCentral was acquired by Google and for awhile people thought that Google killed this service. Here is a screen shot of the new home page:
So as a GrandCentral user I am one of the favored few to be able to use the new Google Voice service. Here are my initial thoughts:
- I prefer GrandCentral’s main page and preference settings. Google Voice uses Google’s bare bones, but familiar user interface. I’m sure I’ll get used to this over time.
- The transcribing feature is very cool and seems to work ok. I’ll have to try it with other languages like Afrikaans and/or Germany as well.
- The mobile interface works much better on my iPhone and I’m very impressed that you can playback voice messages using iPhone’s Quicktime player. I hope Google or somebody else will develop a native iPhone app for Google Voice. Here is the iPhone Mobile interface:
- One huge benefit for me is that I can now use OSX’s AddressBook with Google Contacts syncing functionality to keep my contacts updated in Google. GrandCentral didn’t provide an auto-sync facility and it wasn’t easy to keep contacts in GrandCentral in sync with my Mac’s AddressBook.
- International calling rates seem to be very competitive. I’ll blog about this in an upcoming post. Btw, you get $1 free to get you going. Thanks Google. For example I could speak for 17 minutes calling a land line in South Africa (8c a minute).
- With Google Voice you have an instant and FREE (for US users) conference call facility. Very cool. I’ve been using freeconferencecall.com.
- SMS is new and you can now save an SMS conversation. So far I’ve been able to send and receive SMS message to US numbers. I’ve had success in sending SMS messages to international numbers and only partial success in receiving from international numbers.
- Google doesn’t migrate your old voice messages, however you can still access them by going to the GrandCentral web page.
Here are some other useful postings regarding the new Google Voice service:
- Techcrunch believes it is very, very good.
- David Pogue believes that Google Voice is a little revolution for the rest of us.
- CNET – Google Voice: flawed but still awesome.
- @ Wired they speak of Google Voice World Domination.
- All Things Digital.
- Network World says that CrandCentral grows up as Google Voice!
- and finally Google Voice’s own blog.
I would like to know about your experience using Google Voice? Do you of any other similar service?
Read MoreFree and Low cost cell phone calls – Jajah, Soonr, Jaxtr, Fring, Lypp, MaxRoam
Skype is not the only game in town anymore for free or cheap local and international calls. I use Skype a lot for making international calls when I’m connected to the Internet with my MacBook Pro. When I only have my Blackberry, I use VIP’s local and toll free access numbers to make international calls. Recently I started using Jajah’s local direct dial. On Christmas day Jajah is offering FREE calls.
Here are a few options for making cheap or free calls from your cell phone:
Jajah: Jajah has been around for about a year and I’ve used it on and off. Their new Jajah Direct service works great. They link an international number to a local US number. You dial a local US number and the phone rings in the foreign country you’re calling. This way you can make cheap international calls from your mobile phone. At the moment they have local numbers for most large US cities, e.g., Chicago, New York and San Francisco. I hope they add Atlanta soon. Jajah is very easy to set up and use. You can also use Jajah Mobile Web to make calls from your mobile phone. BBCalls integrates Jajah functionality directly into your Blackberry’s phone book app.
Soonr: I posted about Soonr before. Soonr brings your Mac or PC desktop to your cellphone. With Soonr Talk you can call your Skype friends from your cellphone. If they are online the call is free, else you pay the SkypeOut rate. I haven’t used this recently, however when I used it, it worked great. It does take some time to set up. If you have a lot of Skype friends and you have a browser enabled cellphone with a data plan then your calls are free, cool! This “SoonR Talk workaround enables VoIP on your iPhone” — post from Engadget.
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