Sounds like you should go the mvno or twilio route. Twilio is beta testing
cloud based since assignments that tie into their data and SIP services. If you
go the direct carrier route try mvno.
On Sep 17, 2017 2:34 PM, Jean-Francois Mezei
wrote:
On 2017-09-17 16:40, Max Tulyev wrote:
> 1. My p
> On Sep 17, 2017, at 4:40 PM, Max Tulyev wrote:
>
> Nice advertising, thank you! =)
>
> But still have open some questions I asked before:
>
> 1. My phone is not LTE but 3G GSM/UMTS capable (all bands,
> 850/900/1700/1900/2100). Will it work? Is 3G coverage good enough in New
> York and Orlan
Google Fi is great and all, however right now you're limited to only being
able to use 3 models of phone on the network, wouldn't recommended that for
an overseas traveler.
On Sun, Sep 17, 2017, 12:04 PM wrote:
> GoogleFi
>
> https://fi.google.com/about/
>
> > On Sep 17, 2017, at 10:51, Ca By w
On 2017-09-18 19:01, Nathan Anderson wrote:
> The larger issue for you with T-Mobile might be their previous (and ongoing?)
> use of AWS bands (split 1700MHz uplink/2100 downlink) for 3G service, which
> very few phones sold outside of the U.S. support. They have been working
> nationwide to r
On 09/17/17 14:07, Max Tulyev wrote:
I'm going to visit USA for two weeks. I want to buy a local prepaid SIM
card mostly for IP access.
I use these guys when I fly through the US. Can't say who the
carrier(s) they might use. Can't say if there was a non-natted address.
But I think IPv6 was
I cannot think of any prepaid plans in the U.S. that meet all of your
requirements, though I am far from being familiar with all of them.
Here is what I (think I) "know", though I would love to be set straight on
anything I got wrong or missed:
Generally 3G is available wherever LTE is. Betwee
On 2017-09-17 16:40, Max Tulyev wrote:
> 1. My phone is not LTE but 3G GSM/UMTS capable (all bands,
> 850/900/1700/1900/2100). Will it work? Is 3G coverage good enough in New
> York and Orlando for VoIP calls (SIP, Viber, Skype)?
3G coverage is a superset of LTE coverage. (aka: carriers still hav
If you are talking about Orlando/Central Florida (or anywhere in FL) now or in
next couple of weeks be advised that coverage is still spotty for both voice
and data due to the hurricane.
> On Sep 17, 2017, at 4:40 PM, Max Tulyev wrote:
>
> Nice advertising, thank you! =)
>
> But still have op
Nice advertising, thank you! =)
But still have open some questions I asked before:
1. My phone is not LTE but 3G GSM/UMTS capable (all bands,
850/900/1700/1900/2100). Will it work? Is 3G coverage good enough in New
York and Orlando for VoIP calls (SIP, Viber, Skype)?
2. Is there public or privat
Addituinal notes:
When setting up AT&T prepaid, at one point you need to insert the SIM
into your handset in order to receive a confirmation code (your login
password).
I know this process works while the handset is in Canada. Even though
service is not yet activated on this SIM, the SIM can stil
BTW, AT&T's prefered roaming partner in Canada is Rogers.
In other words, if you have an AT&T SIM card, it will try to log in
first via Rogers. I assume it also roams with Bell/Telus as second
choices but have not been able to test it.
On 2017-09-17 13:07, Max Tulyev wrote:
AT&T's $45 prepaid pans and its more expemsive sibbling (I think $65)
allow over 6GB of data at LTE speeds, and the rest is unlimited but at
2G speeds (I think).
The AT&T plans at the $45 and higher levels allows data and voice
roaming into Canada, as long
Eh, kinda, but not really
https://ios.gadgethacks.com/how-to/set-up-googles-project-fi-your-iphone-0174991/
I used ProjectFi SIMs in my iphone and also in my Peplink LTE routers. Not as
fast as VZW but they work.
-Mike
> On Sep 17, 2017, at 11:19, Caleb Smith wrote:
>
> Google Fi is grea
I'm using KnowRoaming in Europe. Didn't used it in the States yet but in
Canada, I was on Bell LTE network. Pretty sure it's behind NAT though (it
is on KPN in NL anyway).
On Sep 17, 2017 19:08, "Max Tulyev" wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> sorry for possible off-topic, I really did not know where to ask th
GoogleFi
https://fi.google.com/about/
> On Sep 17, 2017, at 10:51, Ca By wrote:
>
>> On Sun, Sep 17, 2017 at 10:09 AM Max Tulyev wrote:
>>
>> Hi All,
>>
>> sorry for possible off-topic, I really did not know where to ask this.
>>
>> I'm going to visit USA for two weeks. I want to buy a loca
On Sun, Sep 17, 2017 at 10:09 AM Max Tulyev wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> sorry for possible off-topic, I really did not know where to ask this.
>
> I'm going to visit USA for two weeks. I want to buy a local prepaid SIM
> card mostly for IP access.
>
> Is it possible in USA to buy a prepaid SIM as a visi
Many of the MVNOs don’t work well if you wander to the more remote parts of the
US.
I’ve used ultra.me before with good luck.
Jared Mauch
> On Sep 17, 2017, at 1:15 PM, Brielle Bruns wrote:
>
>> On 9/17/2017 11:07 AM, Max Tulyev wrote:
>> Hi All,
>> sorry for possible off-topic, I really di
Ting isn’t too bad either for pricing but can’t speak to service quality but we
have a few people that use them and haven’t heard much complaints.
https://ting.com/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMInKW-mOKs1gIVglqGCh2CvQcDEAAYASAAEgLVSPD_BwE
--
Onward!,
Jason Hellenthal,
Systems & Network Admin,
Mobile
On 9/17/2017 11:07 AM, Max Tulyev wrote:
Hi All,
sorry for possible off-topic, I really did not know where to ask this.
I'm going to visit USA for two weeks. I want to buy a local prepaid SIM
card mostly for IP access.
Is it possible in USA to buy a prepaid SIM as a visitor, without long
term
Look at TMobile, they provide IPv6 public addressing, and offer relatively
cheap prepaid plans.
On Sunday, September 17, 2017, Max Tulyev wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> sorry for possible off-topic, I really did not know where to ask this.
>
> I'm going to visit USA for two weeks. I want to buy a local pr
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