Saturday, 26 November 2011

SpeakOut with Android and iPhone

In searching for a cheaper phone plan with data & texting, I decided to try Seven Eleven's SpeakOut plan (SO).

SO runs off the Rogers network, so coverage is good. Petro Canada has a very similar pre-paid plan, but SO seems to be a little cheaper according to some forums.

Anyway, so off to a 711. Since I just recently rooted my Samsung Galaxy S with SuperOneClick (http://shortfuse.org/), I didn't need to purchase a phone that would work with SO. Also, from what I read, apparently any Rogers locked phone will work with SO, since it is running on the same network.

What makes SO different is it is a pre-paid service. So there are no contracts, and since I just came off a 3 year Rogers iPhone contract, I am really interested in the no contract part.

So I get the SIM card, insert it into the Galaxy, it boots up, shows up as on the SpeakOut network. I go to the required SO website, activate the phone by typing in the SIM's activation code and the phone's IMEI, and voila, phone is activated.

I try placing a call, of course it fails, it tells me insufficient credits available to being the call. Which makes sense, since I hadn't bought any air time yet.

Off to register on SO's site with an account, and then to select a plan.

I had already eyed the $30 value plan, it includes 100 minutes any time and unlimited text and unlimited browsing. The unlimited text is quite important since I use that a lot. The unlimited browsing was the curious part, I wasn't sure what this meant. From what I've read, it is sort of a proxied WAP thing. So I expected it to be sucky, like old WAP proxied Internet access on phones before smart phones.

I buy $100 worth of air time, which costs $113 after taxes. In doing so, I get a $25 air time bonus. Now, if I did this in the 7-11 store, I could've gotten a free Nokia craptacular phone. Yeah, not really interested.

After buying the credit, now I can activate the $30 value plan. A few more clicks later, and voila, I can make phone calls, send SMS, access voice mail, all the basics are now working.

But what about this unlimited browsing business?

Turns out, it is sort of a WAP thing, but it is actually pretty decent.

On the Samsung Galaxy S (or any Android running 2.2+), you have to add a APN, which is easy:

1. go to Settings/Wireless & Networks//Mobile Networks/Access Point Names
2. add a APN with the following info:
name: Speakout
APN: goam.com
Proxy: 10.128.1.69
Port: 80
username: wapuser1
password: wap
MMSC: http://mms.gprs.rogers.com
MMS proxy: 10.128.1.69
MMS port: 80
MCC: 302
MNC: 720
authentication type: Not set
APN type: internet + MMS

I tested all the apps I had, maps, email, facebook, twitter, various news apps, weather, it all works!

I downloaded the Speedtest app from the market, and was quite surprised to see the speed was really quite good: ping time approx 140 ms, DL speed 2 MBps, UL: 250 KBps.

Next, I wanted to see if this SO SIM would work with my iPhone 3GS.

Stick in the SIM, plug the iPhone back to iTunes since it is complaining about "Different SIM inserted"... but once connected to iTunes, the msg goes away, and everything is fine.

Right off the bat I try the Weather app, no go. I use SBSettings and check for IP address, nop, no IP address. Humm... Since I had to add a APN with the Android, I read somewhere this can be done with the iPhone Configuration Utility (http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1466). So I get that, and add the following:

1. under Configuration Profiles, click New
2. add Speakout wireless with a Unique Identifier of : com.speakout.wireless
3. under Advanced add:
APN: goam.com
Access point user name: wapuser1
Access point password: wap
Proxy server:port: 10.128.1.69:80
4. plugin the iPhone, and go to to the Configuration Profile tab and click Install
4b. If you get a error installing the profile, click Export on the profile first, that will sign and encrypt the configuration, then, after the profile has been saved through the export process, go back to Configuration Profile tab, and click Install on the profile, and like magic, it is now signed!
5. accept the Profile installation on the iPhone, and voila!

Once this was done, I check SBSettings again, and yup, it now has a data IP. I test all the usual apps, and everything works fine.

So the long and the short of it is, 7-11's SpeakOut unlimited browsing plan works fine on Android and iPhone, and the speed isn't bad either. Certainly in using it, I cannot tell it is any slower than my regular Rogers 3G data connection. I think PetroCanada's service probably works much the same way.

Summary: $10 SIM, $100 air time voucher + taxes = $124.30 total out of pocket. This bought just over 4 months of 100 minutes/month + unlimited text + unlimited browsing of service. That 100 min/month is Canada wide long distance. Visual voicemail is the only thing SO doesn't have.

5 comments:

  1. Good information. I may consider it.

    Questions (similar to Richard's):
    Does the time spent using data (i.e., on the internet) consume minutes?

    Are unused minutes forfeited at the end of a month?

    Is Visual Voicemail supported?

    I'll be making phone/plan changes next year for sure.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Unused minutes do not carry over. But that's just like any other cellphone plan.

    ReplyDelete
  3. And no, time spent on data does not count against minutes.

    ReplyDelete
  4. We used SO for a couple months on one of our iPhones, and it worked pretty well. I thought time rolled over to 90 days though...

    ReplyDelete
  5. followed instruction and got web working on 4S and speed test shows 5M down load but 0 upload
    skype and other voip apps do not register

    ReplyDelete