Pingo, the prepaid international calling service from iBasis, now has released a smartphone application enabling simple international calling from a wide variety of smartphones, including the iPhone, Blackberry, Treo and phones using operating systems such as Nokia Symbian, Windows Mobile and Google Android.
"Pingo EZ Dial" automatically syncs with the mobile's address book, so dialing happens the way it always does, but the Pingo client recognizes that an international number is being called and routes the call using the Pingo network.
EZ Dial users don’t dial access numbers, PIN codes or change their calling behavior in any way and does not require users to connect to Wi-Fi. Users will consume domestic or local airtime minutes of use, but incur no global calling charges from their mobile provider.
Users go to the Pingo Web site (http://www.pingo.com) to sign up for a prepaid account. Users of iPhone devices can download the client for free from the Applie App Store. Users of other phones simply enter a phone number and Pingo sends out a text message with a hot link that initiates the over-the-air client download.
Pingo thinks the move is important since more calls are being initiated from mobile handsets these days, so more global calling also is being initiated from handsets.
Users with feature phones can get the same low rates, but will have to dial a local access number, since those phones cannot download the EZ Dial client.
All of that will change as Long Term Evolution or WiMAX networks become more ubiquitous, since all devices operating on those networks will be data devices able to download clients.
In many ways, the Pingo mobile calling capability is a reflection of the broader shift to mobile-originated and terminated calling. Pingo long has been a huge supplier of white label wholesale services to other retail providers, and most of those providers were wired network providers.
Since the U.S. market is by far one of the largest global markets in the world, mobile support is important for any company that makes a living from international voice traffic. Also, mobile origination is more important in the U.S. market, since the ratio of origination to termiantion is about three to one outbound compared to inbound, says Jayesh Patel, iBasis VP. "Most countries don't have that sort of imbalance."
Recently, iBasis has noted more use of its calling plans by business users as well, so EZ Dial is offered in a business account version that allows easier administrative setup and call tracking.
Friday, November 6, 2009
Pingo Launches Smartphone-Based Global Calling Service
Labels:
consumer VoIP,
enterprise iPhone,
ibasis,
mobile VoIP
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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1 comment:
Interesting shift in the Voip calls, what does the mobile operator get out of this, they are being bypass. Can this model be expanded in to developing countries. need help in developing this model.
Issi
imoyo@sitelnetwork.com
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