nwhitfield
Member

Registered: Feb 2000
Location: London, UK
Posts: 92 |
Historically speaking, the GSM1800 networks have tended to be cheaper than the longer established GSM900 ones, certainly in the UK and a few other European countries that I know of.
BUT that's generally been the case when these extra networks started; over time competition (and regulation, which seems alien to some in the US) has evened things out quite a lot.
On the roaming front, you may or may not be losing out. It depends on the deals offered by your carrier, and if you don't have a choice of carrier, then yep, you might get a bum deal and not be able to select a cheaper network.
In Europe, however, more and more carriers are moving to simpler pricing, because the choice of GSM can be confusing. If I'm in the Netherlands, I'd have a choice of five networks to select from when I landed at Schipol, and lots of punters won't want to worry about what to choose. So my home network (which is also one of the cheapest for roaming) now does a flat rate system - any network, in any country in the Western Europe zone, will cost me the same to use. Same for US, Asia, Australia and so on. So if I had a single band 1800 phone, or used VisorPhone abroad and so could only pick a 900MHz network, it wouldn't matter.
Of course, that's happened because of the number of GSM networks and competition between them, which is a result of enforced standardisation leading to a mature market.
The US has gone for the opposite approach, leaving things to the market (someone will probably come along and tell me Europe is communist or something daft in a moment...). And leaving it to the market hasn't really worked in wireless for you; you might find a couple of networks in each area, but with wildly differing technologies, people have to swap phones to move.
Why GSM 1900 is used in the US instead of 1800 I don't know; perhaps someone can give a convincing technical or licensing reason. A fair number of people I've chatted with seem to hold the opinion that it's a case of "NIH" or "Not Invented Here" syndrome, but that's just cynical ;-)
Whether GSM will mature (or wireless at all) in the US, I don't know; you're certainly a long way off the penetration in Europe. I know more of your carriers are promising GSM, but I imagine it'll be a while yet before most people have a choice of four carriers, which is pretty common in most of Europe.
Nigel.
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