An Idiot’s Guide To Prepaid GPRS

By | June 29, 2005

Further to my earlier post about GPRS traveling woes, I asked Syd Low of AlienCamel to offer his thoughts on the subject. He’s something of an old hand at the game.

For the last two years I’ve gone “on the road” to the Alps. My journey goes through Asia, then Switzerland and finally Austria. In 2004 I had a Treo 600 and this year a Treo 650. I’ve used GPRS with prepaid SIM cards in five countries will almost perfect success to stay in touch with friends and colleagues using IM and Email.

In Europe, I usually look for a mobile shop at the airport or train terminal. Zurich airport is great – all three carriers are there -Swisscom, Sunrise and Vodafone. Just wander in, buy a card and you’re on your way in less than 20 minutes. When you return the following year, you just need to get a recharge card and you’re away in 5 minutes. In Asia and Italy, I found that all carriers have shops in the main street. Venice and Verona for example have Vodafone shops conveniently located among the shops and resellers everywhere. Same deal – quick and fast transactions. In Austria where there’s not much competition, the most convenient place is the post office where you can get A1 prepaid cards. Recharge cards are available at supermarkets.

The Treo 650 auto configures to all of these networks and there’s no need to manually make any setting changes. Just put the sim card in and everything just works. I’ve only had a minor glitch with A1. For a few days I couldn’t get GPRS coverage – not sure if it was my phone or the network high in the Alps.

Life would be a lot simpler if there was a carrier that did global roaming with fair rates, but I think it’ll be a blue moon when that happens. Until then, get yourself a little case to get a sim card for each country.

Thanks, Syd.  Oh and here’s a picture of his SIM-card stash:

Simstash

2 thoughts on “An Idiot’s Guide To Prepaid GPRS

  1. Denny Arar

    Is buying a SIM card for each country a good strategy if you’re also going to be making calls to other countries? In other words, if I land in France but will need to occasionally call the UK and Germany, and then move to the UK where I will occasionally need to call France and Germany, should I get separate cards for each country or just buy one in France and use it in the UK and Germany?

    Reply
  2. katherine

    Same question…if someone could anser this urgently. Need to use a cell in multiple europe countries calling multiple euro countries.
    Is there anything that covers all this? Can you buy a cheap phone in europe to do this? Company names and instructions from you other savvy travellers? thanks Kat

    Reply

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