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20 October 2011 ~ 5 Comments

Gigabags arrive at Giffgaff

Giffgaff have finally launched their long-awaited data-only goodybag (they call it a “Gigabag”). Promised for months, the new goodybags are designed specially for data devices such as dongles, mobile Wifi hotsopts, iPads and other tablets. Previously, Giffgaff had given unlimited data for anyone on a goodybag costing at least £10 but customers were not permitted to use SIMs in anything other than a phone to access the internet. This meant that it was impossible for internet tablet users to get the fantastic Giffgaff value nor to use their Giffgaff SIMs for tethering. Thankfully, this situation has now been well and truly rectified 🙂

On 23 September, Giffgaff finally officially announced that the much-requested data-only goodybags were coming soon. They also announced the various plans available as well as all the details of the pricing. There are three goodybags being introduced in total:

£5.00 – 500MB data
£7.50 – 1GB data
£12.50 – 3GB data

All the goodybags last for one month and can be bought from your credit balance or with a debit or credit card. You can’t use it in combination with any other Giffgaff goodybag and if it runs out you must wait until the next month but they do give you 50MB free in case you run over your allowance. And overage is charged at just 2p/MB after that.

We’ve had a look around and have to admit that, like their PAYG services, the value offered by these data-only goodybags is pretty much as good as it’s possible to get. In fact, Giffgaff have even admitted that if you use every last drop of data in the goodybags, they’ll actually end up losing money on them. Not a bad deal, eh?

The launch of these new products is a breath of fresh air for anyone in the UK looking for a cheap and simple, no frills PAYG SIM for mobile data. The £12.50 goodybag offering 3GB of data is probably the best deal currently going for mobile broadband on a laptop, dongle or tablet device. If you want to take advantage of this great news, order a free Giffgaff SIM right now or if you want to use it in an iPad, get a free pre-cut micro-SIM instead. And don’t forget, their fantastic offer for £5 free credit is still running if you order it through us.

16 October 2011 ~ 0 Comments

BlackBerry outages – the end of RIM?

BlackBerry users are still reeling from the mass outages that affected millions of customers over the last week. Around 10am BST on Monday users noticed problems with emails routed through the Blackberry servers as well as the BBM messaging service. It was reported that the outage was due to the failure of one of the core switches in Slough which resulted in a massive cascade failure but customers claimed to be seeing a complete loss of BlackBerry Services which appeared to be confirmed by BlackBerry.

In what swiftly turned into a huge PR fiasco, BlackBerry manufacturers RIM initially claimed via Twitter on Tuesday morning that the email issues had been fixed. However, a couple of ours later it turned out that issues were still ongoing across Europe, the Middle East and Africa. Furthermore, RIM soon revealed that even more of its 70 million customers were being affected as problems spread to South America too. In the end, it wasn’t until Thursday 13th October, after almost four days of outages, before services were finally restored back to normal though a substantial backlog remained.

This isn’t the only major outage that have affected BlackBerry customers. RIM was struck by massive service disruptions in 2007 and 2009 as well as several more localised issues over the years. Customers in Central and South American countries also were hit by email and BBM outages in September when servers went down. The latest problems come at the worst possible time for RIM who are rapidly losing customer share to Android and iOS. They are already still reeling from the disappointing of the BlackBerry Playbook and have only just reported a crash in their share price to $25 from a healthy $60 back in January this year.

Many will wonder how much longer the Canadian company will keep afloat. Seemingly the only thing helping BlackBerry now is the ubiquitous physical keyboard and legions of mindless trend-following teenagers who don’t understand that BBM is uncool and inferior to all the free alternatives. Or that unlimited texts on Giffgaff is cheaper than any BlackBerry plan. Still, following this latest outage, RIM will be most worried about how it affects the trust of its remaining professional users who might react by questioning how dependable BlackBerry Services are for vital business-critical emails. Given the centralised nature of BlackBerry communications services (there are a mere four network operations centres worldwide to deal with all Blackberry data traffic), many will be arguing that this latest issue was only a matter of time.

Update 17th October:
After the whole débâcle, the only compensation RIM offered to their customers was roughly £60 of overpriced apps from the BlackBerry app store. Time will tell whether this will satisfy the affected users, especially business customers.

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15 October 2011 ~ 0 Comments

Want a free gold phone number?

If so you’re in luck! Don’t waste £100s buying phone numbers on eBay – choose a personal and easy-to-remember mobile number yourself for free today. We’ve written up a guide spelling out all the exact steps to get a Gold Number absolutely free.

By taking advantage of an offer from Family Mobile (one of our favourite virtual networks), you can get a memorable Gold Number completely free. You can even search for the particular combination of digits you want. We describe what Gold Numbers are, how to get them without paying a penny and also show that you don’t even need to keep it with Family Mobile. We just posted in-depth guides explaining how to port your new Gold Number to other networks so you can use it with your favourite budget carrier.

Check out our free Gold Number article for more and let us know if you find any really rare phone numbers for free.