Tag Archives: Free phone calls

Free Wifi Text App



TextPlus (http://www.textplus.com/) is a cool new app that allows you to text and make phone calls for free from any wi-fi enabled mobile device, including your iPod Touch. Normally, you’d need a full mobile phone account and device to text or call but TextPlus lets you text for free and call other TextPlus users for free, too.

We’ve talked about Dell Voice before. This app allows you to call landlines and cell phones for free but text isn’t included. Check out our post here: Dell Voice  With TextPlus, you get a free number, just as you do with Dell Voice, but you can also text. Seems like TextPlus is a better alternative, right?

Head over to the TextPlus site and check out the details of their service. You get a free phone number, just choose where you want the calls to appear to originate from. Remember that you have to install the app from your app store before can sign up. Install the app, apply for an account (all you need is an email address and some other insignificant details (not your home address) and you’re off!

TIP: Calls from one TextPlus account to another are always free. Texts are always free. Phone calls to landlines or mobile devices are extra but very cheap or free. If you watch some ads, you get free minutes. You can also buy minutes. Right now, if you pay $19.99 , you get 1,300 minutes (1,000 in Canada) which is just about free, isn’t it? It seems to us that these rates are substantially cheaper than the rates that Skype offers.

 

Prices for phone minutes in Canada
Prices for phone minutes in Canada.

 

Prices for phone minutes in the U.S.
Prices for phone minutes in the U.S.

 

Unfortunately, this offer is only good in the U.S. and Canada, not even Hawaii or Alaska. Check your local app store. There may be something like this around where you live.

 

Thanks for reading! If you’ve used TextPlus, let us know what you think.

 

TIP: We are not affiliated with TextPlus in any way. We just like free things.

Turn an iPod Touch into a Telephone (for free!)



Dell Voice is a new service offered by Dell and Fongo. It’s an app for Android or Apple iOS devices and uses either 3G or 4G or WiFi to make telephone calls. Yes, you can do that with other apps such as Skype or GmailVoice  but there is a difference. With Dell Voice you get your own phone number. How cool is that? Oh, it’s free. Did I mention that? Right now, it’s offered in Canada only but it may be offered at some point, south of the border.

Here’s how I got it to work on a iPod Touch.

1. Download the app here: http://www.dellvoice.ca/systemRequirements  Install it.

2. Go to dellvoice.ca and register. You don’t need a credit card because it’s free, right? Just sign up for a new account. Dell Voice will send you a registration email, naturally, with a link to confirm your email address.

3. Once you click on the link, you’ll be prompted for some address details. This is for 911 service. Yes, DellVoice supports 911 service, it’s just a bit slower than a regular landline.

4. Once you get all of the details sorted out, there will be a prompt for choosing a province and a city in Canada. This gets you your own phone number. There were none in my city so I had to choose one that was close but still within the free calling zone from Toronto.

TIP: If you are lucky enough to get a number in your city, you can call that area code from anywhere in the world that has WiFi. Dell Voice uses VOIP (data) to function. Obviously if you are charged for data on a WiFi network overseas there will be charges but if you’re at Starbucks, let’s say, the calls are free to your own area code. Dell Voice calls to Dell Voice phones are also free.

5. Once I completed the registration I fired up my iPod Touch, downloaded the app and called my home number. Sure enough, it worked. The voice was crystal clear without the delay that Skype usually has. On an iPod the sound comes through the speaker, of course, so you’d need your earphones to listen in private.

Dell Voice is available here: http://www.dellvoice.ca/

The beauty of this whole thing is that you get a real phone number and calls within the Canadian calling area are free if you have an unlimited data plan on your mobile phone.  If you have free WiFi then the calls are free, too. If you have unlimited data but you pay for your cell phone minutes, this is a superb option.

As far as international rates, they are frickin’ low. China, Hong Kong, the U.S. and most other well-known countries are $.02 a minute. Rates will change, I assume, but you can check what they are currently here: http://www.dellvoice.ca/ldServices

Canadians have been screwed royally by mobile phone companies. There aren’t many of us up here, only 33 million or so, and we’re strung all over hell’s half acre. Until now, Bell and Rogers et al. have felt the need to overcharge us for something as simple as phone calls and test messaging. Dell Voice should shake things up a bit. Let’s hope it stays around for a while.

TIP: If you don’t use your phone number in any 90 day period, you lose your number. If you use Dell Voice for emergencies, remember to call yourself a few times a month in order for you to maintain your original free number.

Thanks for reading!