View Full Version : Using phone card with cell phone
Guess_11
Sep 7th, 2007, 02:14 AM
If I used a phone card to call from Toronto to Vancouver on my cell phone, do I still get charged by Rogers for long distance?
Kwirky
Sep 7th, 2007, 03:37 AM
So long as the phone card access # is a local or toll free number, you'll only use up your local minutes.
hardcoredummy
Sep 7th, 2007, 07:47 AM
I always thought that the phone cards don't work with cellphones.
sunnybono
Sep 7th, 2007, 09:51 AM
I use www.babatel.com all the time for all my longdistance phone calls. As long as you are in the 416 area and dial their 416 number, you will not get charged by rogers. The only thing rogers will do is count the call as regular airtime!!!! In fact I used Babatel's 1-877# and didn't get charged when I was in montreal last month!!!!!!
sk
Paolo
Sep 7th, 2007, 11:54 AM
I always thought that the phone cards don't work with cellphones.
phone cards are simply a card with a local phone number you dial, and a password/Pin. The local number connects your call, its the same as calling your friend ,your uncle and your aunt bertha.,
Cellphones can place calls to any number, including local numbers. you will enter your password/pin just like you do on your landline phone at home. Can't get any easier. it also uses up your local minutes just like if you were to call your cousin, your uncle or your aunt bertha
Aske001
Sep 7th, 2007, 12:31 PM
Yak has a useful long-distance service option if you have a cell phone plan that gives you free incoming calls. You call their special access number. It pretends to be busy so there's no charge, but it gets your caller ID. You hang up, and it calls you back as an incoming local call a few seconds later. Then you place your long-distance call using Yak.
hardcoredummy
Sep 8th, 2007, 12:28 PM
phone cards are simply a card with a local phone number you dial, and a password/Pin. The local number connects your call, its the same as calling your friend ,your uncle and your aunt bertha.,
I know how they worked. At one time, you couldn't call these numbers from your cellphone. I should know, my parents sell about 50 different brands at their store.
ji2o0k
Sep 8th, 2007, 12:30 PM
I know how they worked. At one time, you couldn't call these numbers from your cellphone. I should know, my parents sell about 50 different brands at their store.
not sure how long ago that was but I have been using phone cards for about 2 years now and it is works fine with my cell (or any phone for that matter).
Paolo
Sep 8th, 2007, 12:38 PM
not sure how long ago that was but I have been using phone cards for about 2 years now and it is works fine with my cell (or any phone for that matter).
I used to have a cellphone back in the Rogers Cantel era, yes it was Analogue too. I never remembered calling cards not working. Heck, I even used a calling card on my Analogue cellphone in the states (buffalo) some 15 years ago and remember it working too.
hardcoredummy
Sep 8th, 2007, 12:43 PM
I used to have a cellphone back in the Rogers Cantel era, yes it was Analogue too. I never remembered calling cards not working. Heck, I even used a calling card on my Analogue cellphone in the states (buffalo) some 15 years ago and remember it working too.
A calling card is different. That's prepaid to be used with a phonebooth. Phone cards at one point didn't work with cellphones. I tried it in the past to get around the cell phone long distance charges (this was about 10 years ago as well).
Phone cards didn't work with phonebooths back then either.
If i had to take a guess why they work now, is because they're no longer buying time from Bell, but using VOIP technology, so Bell can't put limitations like that. But i know for a FACT that at one point these things did not work for cellphones (so obviously you're lying when you said you used them 15 years ago)
Paolo
Sep 8th, 2007, 01:17 PM
A calling card is different. That's prepaid to be used with a phonebooth. Phone cards at one point didn't work with cellphones. I tried it in the past to get around the cell phone long distance charges (this was about 10 years ago as well).
Phone cards didn't work with phonebooths back then either.
If i had to take a guess why they work now, is because they're no longer buying time from Bell, but using VOIP technology, so Bell can't put limitations like that. But i know for a FACT that at one point these things did not work for cellphones (so obviously you're lying when you said you used them 15 years ago)
Buddy, I'm not lying. they WORKED. Perhaps SOME cards did not work? or SOME cellphone carriers did not support certain numerical exchanges (numbers), is more likely your situation, but I've been working in Telecom for close to half my life, I know my sh1t. I used a calling card in buffalo on my Cantel Motorola DPC cellphone roaming on a carrier called Cellular One to call back to canada, (had to pay roaming, but saved the additional LD fees) and it worked, the funny thing, almost all amps subscribers numbers in those days were not showing on caller id back then yet they were still private when they called landlines, but somehow the calling card "passed through" our cell number to the landline network, so at home it showed up too, which was unusual but definately worked bro.