|
Cellular forums Home > Archive > Cell Phones in Great Britain > April 2008 > Mobile Phone UK contract advice
You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread.
To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to
this thread please [click here]
| Author |
Mobile Phone UK contract advice
|
|
| number8bus 2008-03-30, 4:33 am |
| Hi there,
If I wanted to dial a mobile phone number on my landline in London to
the phone which is located in New York, would I need to put extra
digits?
This is assuming that the phone was originally bought in UK and the
phone has a contract with Vodafone UK.
?
Regards
L.
| |
|
| number8bus wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> If I wanted to dial a mobile phone number on my landline in London to
> the phone which is located in New York, would I need to put extra
> digits?
>
> This is assuming that the phone was originally bought in UK and the
> phone has a contract with Vodafone UK.
>
> ?
>
> Regards
> L.
Nope, just dial the number as normal, you wont pay any extra
either, since you are just dialling an ordinary UK number, the
person receiving the call will pay, on Vodafone I think it's
£1.10 a minute for them to receive.
| |
|
| In article <fbbaebee-3410-483b-ac7b-
5bde4b7c64fb@m73g200
0hsh.googlegroups.com>, number8bus@googlemai
l.com
says...
> Hi there,
>
> If I wanted to dial a mobile phone number on my landline in London to
> the phone which is located in New York, would I need to put extra
> digits?
No.
--
Regards
Jon
| |
|
| number8bus wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> If I wanted to dial a mobile phone number on my landline in London to
> the phone which is located in New York, would I need to put extra
> digits?
The whole point of the system is that you can't be expected to know
where a mobile phone is when you call it, so you dial the number as
usual and the system works out where to route it. Similarly, you pay to
call the number you dial, and any extra roaming charges are not your
responsibility.
|
|
|
|
|