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| Todd Allcock wrote:
> And yes, Oxford- this will work on your iPhone! ;-)
>
> Voicestick, a VoIP company with a cellular "bridge" service (you dial
> your own VoIP number from your cellphone and get a dial tone to dial
> internationally at VoIP rates) is offering free beta accounts (with $10
> of LD credit) of their new "MyGlobalTalk" service.
>
> Details can be found at this thread on the dslreports forum, where Bruce
> Niklin, Voicestick's VP hangs out:
> http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r20...st-of-MyGlobalT
>
>
> They are taking credit card numbers to limit the number of free accounts
> you can sign up for (they had major abuse problems on a similar promo a
> year or two ago) but if you any international calling, think of this as
> a free $10 LD card. They have software for WinMo phones that automates
> the dialing process (the phone detects international numbers, intercepts
> the dialing sequence and dials your access number first) but any phone
> can use the account by dialing the access number manually and then the
> international number. (Obviously you can program the whole sequence
> into your phone's memory dialing.)
>
> Bruce says they need a couple hundred more testers so grab an account if
> you can use it. Voicestick's a neat little outfit trying to find a
> niche in the crowded VoIP world.
Well I set up a MyGlobalTalk account to forward a local number to my GSM
phone that I take overseas. I can either use my global SIM from MaxRoam
to make and receive calls in Taiwan, or I can buy a prepaid SIM card in
Taiwan and just change the forwarding number to whatever the prepaid SIM
card number is.
I notice that caller ID doesn't work like it does on Voicestick.
The number I got for MyGlobalTalk has only the last digit different than
my Voicestick number. Guess they're not selling too many numbers in the
city I used.
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