Wholegamut’s Weblog

Using a calling card got a little more easier, thanks to iPhone

Posted in Uncategorized by wholegamut on May 4th, 2008

As many of you may know, calling cards are typically used to call overseas at cheaper rates than what ISD calls would offer. I use these cards frequently to call my friends and family in India.

For all the impatient folk that are tired of listening through the lengthy messages and pressing a lot of keys on the cell phone while using these calling cards to call someone, here is a tidbit.

iPhone gives you an option to store the phone number of a contact along with the toll free number of the calling card provider .This means you don’t have to press the recipient’s number every time you call him/her. You create a contact and assign it the recipient’s number along with the toll free number. Once you store this composite number you can directly call this number in the iPhone-esque way of feather-touching it and iPhone takes care of pressing the keys for you.

Let me use an example to drive my point home.

For example if the toll-free number of the calling card is 1-866-123-1234 and the number you wanna call is 8611234567, you can create a contact and assign the contact, the following number : “18661231234,918611234567″ ; 91 is the international code of the country, in this case it is India . I am assuming that you have your phone registered with the calling card provider so that you do not have to press the access code; only few calling cards provide this option. If not, the sequence, “18661231234,123123,918611234567″ would do; 123123 is the assumed access code. Now, all you have to do is to dial this stored contact in the iPhone-esque way of feather-touching it.

Obviously the question on your mind at this point would be about the location of the “,” character on your iPhone keypad. You can find a key that has the characters “+*#”. Press that key and you will notice the change of the keypad style. The new-style keypad has a “pause” key. Pressing this “pause” key would introduce ‘,’ character. The ‘,’ character results in a unit delay between the preceding and the succeeding number. If you had decided to introduce two units of delay you would type in two commas; your number now looks like 18661231234,,918611234567.

As few of you might have already noticed , this method of storing numbers can also be used to store telephone numbers with extensions , and thereby avoid the repeated labor of manually typing the extension numbers .

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4 Responses to 'Using a calling card got a little more easier, thanks to iPhone'

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  1. AM said, on May 16th, 2008 at 2:24 am

    The calling card feature that is missing in the iPhone is probably the ONLY reason why I still use my SE p900. In the SE P900, I can store MANY calling cards and then choose to dial using a calling card or direct dial. This way I can have my normal contact list synced without any special codes or sequence and it works very well.
    I save a ton of money this way with VOIP2Go, T-Mobile MyFaves and my P900. For eg. Last month I used over 5000 minutes on my T-mobile plan but did not exceed the 300 minutes of the plan….!
    I’m a big Mac user but when I’m saving real money, it matters to me more.
    AM

  2. endocrinology said, on May 28th, 2008 at 3:08 pm

    endocrinology says : I absolutely agree with this !

  3. Joe said, on June 25th, 2008 at 1:28 am

    Wholegamut… Did you actually try this? I don’t think this works at all. This is a business critical feature, and the iPhone simply doesn’t offer it.

  4. wholegamut said, on June 25th, 2008 at 4:05 am

    Joe

    Absolutely. All my Indian numbers are stored in this fashion i.e, concatenated with the calling card number.

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