6 ways to keep phone charges low during international travel
6 ways to keep phone charges low during international travel
With the exception of Verizon , carriers typically block your phone from other carriers' plans until you've paid off the hardware, typically after two years.
Just visit a kiosk at the airport when you arrive, or stop by a cellphone or convenience store in town.
[...] it'll get you email and basic messaging, and it's much cheaper than the $205 Verizon would charge for 100 megabytes without an international plan.
Use your hotel's Wi-Fi as much as possible; your Instagram pictures can wait, especially if your friends are asleep anyway.
Otherwise, the phone waited until I got back to the hotel's Wi-Fi.
On most version of Android, turn on "Restrict background data" to blocks apps from using cellular data while running in the background.
To let certain apps override that, you need "Data saver" on the latest version of Android, Nougat, which isn't yet available on most phones.
Get and set up apps for museums and other places you're visiting before you leave home or the hotel.
The offline mode isn't meant for walking directions, though what I got for driving was often close enough (The exception was Venice, where cars are banned).
[...] there's no offline transit support, but I got transit directions by enabling cellular briefly and used offline mode to get to my stops.
Netflix recently updated its app to offer similar downloads for offline viewing.