
-Hailey
The model number on Nokia phones can usually be found by taking a peek under the battery – the phone needs to be turned off and the battery removed for this, of course.casuallyrad wrote:I did a search about cell phones in this forum but the info seemed quite dated. I currently have a really old Nokia, not sure the model and I know its locked. If I am planning on staying in Finland for at least a year should I bring my phone with me (and grab another power adapter for the charger) or plan on buying a new or used one when I arrive?
Finnish cellular operators (their Finnish pages generally contain more options and information):casuallyrad wrote:What can I expect to pay for a standard contract or is Pay as you go a better option for most people?
Do you just want to make voice calls and send SMS messages or are you interested in cellular broadband (Internet services) too? (usable either with the phone itself, or with your laptop while on the go – the phone can connect to the laptop via a USB cable or Bluetooth and provide the Internet connectivity to it that way.)casuallyrad wrote:What am I forgetting to ask? Any advice is appreciated!! :D
Do a search for mobile phone instead, nobody here calls them cell phones.casuallyrad wrote:I did a search about cell phones in this forum but the info seemed quite dated.
To do exactly what with it? Set it on "vibrate" and stuff it into your pants? Illegal to use as a fishnet weight too.casuallyrad wrote: I currently have a really old Nokia, not sure the model and I know its locked. If I am planning on staying in Finland for at least a year should I bring my phone with me (and grab another power adapter for the charger)
You're a funny foreigner with no credit rating, so to *get* a contract you'd need to shell out serious money as funny foreigners tend to make funny bills and leave to the funny countries so the companies think its not funny. A prepaid is what you can get. Then you should also consider it costs to "E.T. call home" so figure out how to use Skype and figure out how to rig one up. There are "magic numbers" for overseas calls, but you still pay the local charge + the overseas charge on top.What can I expect to pay for a standard contract or is Pay as you go a better option for most people?
Canadian cell phone companies are robbers. I pay more than $40/month for a very basic plan, no data or anything. I dont make an abnormal amount of calls or txts so Im looking forward to better rates in Finland. I noticed most phone plans have better rates if you are calling someone with the same service provider. Is one company more popular than the other so I can take advantage of that?Pursuivant wrote:To do exactly what with it? Set it on "vibrate" and stuff it into your pants? Illegal to use as a fishnet weight too.casuallyrad wrote: I currently have a really old Nokia, not sure the model and I know its locked. If I am planning on staying in Finland for at least a year should I bring my phone with me (and grab another power adapter for the charger)
You're a funny foreigner with no credit rating, so to *get* a contract you'd need to shell out serious money as funny foreigners tend to make funny bills and leave to the funny countries so the companies think its not funny. A prepaid is what you can get. Then you should also consider it costs to "E.T. call home" so figure out how to use Skype and figure out how to rig one up. There are "magic numbers" for overseas calls, but you still pay the local charge + the overseas charge on top.What can I expect to pay for a standard contract or is Pay as you go a better option for most people?
It will work here but it isn't 3G.casuallyrad wrote:Canadian cell phone companies are robbers. I pay more than $40/month for a very basic plan, no data or anything. I dont make an abnormal amount of calls or txts so Im looking forward to better rates in Finland. I noticed most phone plans have better rates if you are calling someone with the same service provider. Is one company more popular than the other so I can take advantage of that?
Skype is the best way to call home, it must cost an arm and a leg to call Canada from a cell phone. Do any prepaid plans offer a free phone when you start? Right now I have a Nokia 6682, its old but I think it will work there.
To the OP: Here’s a price comparison site which should give an idea of how much the local phones cost when bought alone. They also do comparisons of different contracts.Pursuivant wrote:A basic phone is say 50 to 100 euros...