Since the topic has been passed around again and again in the media for many years, it should actually be clear to everyone who lives near the border or is temporarily staying there that they should switch off roaming.

If you don’t do this, you are certainly not entitled to any compensation from the provider because it is clearly a case of incorrect operation/misconfiguration of the end device. As is well known, ignorance does not protect against punishment.

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I don’t quite understand the excitement, in > inOne Mobile basic< the calls from EU to CH are unlimited, i.e. free.

In addition, the Bruderholz Hospital in Binningen is located at a fairly high geographical location, so it is easily possible for the transmitter to get in. In my previous professional life, I also had special radio (frequency emergency services, police, fire brigade, etc.) and here too we had the French visit several times 😉

Tschamic

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@Tschamic wrote:

I don’t quite understand the excitement, in > inOne Mobile basic< the calls from EU to CH are unlimited, i.e. free.

In addition, the Bruderholz Hospital in Binningen is quite geographically high, so it is easily possible for the transmitter to get in. In my previous professional life, I also had special radio (frequency emergency services, police, fire brigade, etc.) and here too we had the French visit several times 😉

Tschamic


Where did you read that the inOne Mobile Basic exists?

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Installationen, Netzwerk, Internet, Computertechnik, OS Windows, Apple und Linux.


@Tschamic wrote:

@WalterB

[Here](https://www.swisscom.ch/de/privatkunden/mobile/abo-uebersicht.html?aboCategory=nfxe63tfl5ww6ytjnrsq%3D&contractDuration=12 &inOne=false&under26=false&abo=ng_inone_mobile_kapla30&useCase=ACTIVATION&subscriptionType=aboWithDevice#tab%5Bselected%5D=0)

Tschamic


yes, it’s also included in inone mobile go and premium, but no one knows whether @hallo1 has the subscription

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@Tschamic

Wanted to write where you read that the thread creator has this subscription? 😁

In any case, a text message always comes and you can then react.

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Installationen, Netzwerk, Internet, Computertechnik, OS Windows, Apple und Linux.

Hello everyone

It’s getting too stupid for me: after more than 13 years of almost weekly visits to the Bruderholz, yesterday was the first time that I was welcomed in France.

There are comments that recommend a different tariff that are pretty helpless.

As always, it’s the customer’s fault. For me, the issue is over and done with.

hello1

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@hallo1

The customer is not and should not always be at fault, but some personal responsibility is part of it. And also that you sometimes have to bite the bullet as a learning experience. And I say that here as a customer.

You can and should still try to see if the provider is accommodating -> Helpdesk 0800 800 800.

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Hello everyone

Switzerland has 10 stricter limits for NIS values. Than the WHO prescribed.

All countries around Switzerland are allowed to operate their cell phone antennas with 10 more power, which also means that these cell phone networks reach much further, even reaching deep into Switzerland.

Since they are also allowed to transmit 10 more powerful, the country also needs fewer antennas, which also makes the costs cheaper.

Greetings Lorenz

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@Lori-77 wrote:

Since they are also allowed to transmit 10 more powerful, the country also needs fewer antennas, which also makes the costs cheaper.


The range of a cell phone antenna is limited by the uplink. The uplink is the transmission direction from the mobile device to the cell phone antenna.

The transmission power of the mobile device is standardized worldwide:

- 2G/GSM: 2000 mW (33 dBm => 3GPP TS 05.05 / ETSI TS 100 910)

- 3G/UMTS: 250 mW (25 dBm => 3GPP TS 25.101 / ETSI TS 125 101)

- 4G/LTE: 200 mW (23 dBm => 3GPP TS 36.101 / ETSI TS 36.101)

This means that the same number of mobile phone antennas are always needed worldwide for a basic mobile service. Only the mobile phone frequency band used can significantly vary the range of a mobile phone antenna (technical term: cell radius).

See also:

[https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reichbreite\_(Radio Technology)](https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reichweit_(Radio Technology))

[https://mobilecommunity.ch/wbb/index.php?thread/339-ausbaustand-5g-netz-bei-sunrise-ab-m%C3%A4rz-2019/&postID=2750#post2750] (https://mobilecommunity.ch/wbb/index.php?thread/339-ausbaustand-5g-netz-bei-sunrise-ab-m%C3%A4rz-2019/&postID=2750#post2750)

https://www.5g-provider.info/ratgeber/reichbreite.html

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobilfunkfrequencies_in_der_Switzerland#Technical_Basic

Of all the mobile networks implemented, the EAN is the mobile network with the greatest range.

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Aviation_Network

For EAN, the “mobile device” mounted on the aircraft fuselage transmits with a transmission power of 5 watts (37 dBm). This means that an aircraft can reliably communicate with an EAN mobile radio antenna located a maximum of 150 kilometers away (Switzerland: Chasseral, Säntis, Monte Generoso, probably also Titlis) via 4G/LTE in frequency band 65. The condition is of course that there is a line of sight between the aircraft and the EAN mobile phone antenna!

The denser the “antenna forest”, the more data transmission capacity the mobile network has. Thanks to the strict radiation limits, the Swiss “antenna forest” is significantly denser than in Germany. And that’s why today the Swiss mobile phone providers perform best in comparison (=> see Connect mobile network test reports) to the entire German-speaking region!

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