If you opt for recurring payment, your plan will be auto renewed every 30 days. Or once 60GB has been used up.What’s the extra data charge for jumbo plan? Exceed 60GB no data, how much need top up or it would automatically charged you?
Auto renew when 60Gb used up is quite bad imo. Cannot use up all the data like that, have to end at 59GB on the last day to avoid getting charged earlier.If you opt for recurring payment, your plan will be auto renewed every 30 days. Or once 60GB has been used up.
The above is taken from their response to one of the comments on their Facebook page. So I guess it may be double edged for the automatic renewal via debit/credit card if you regularly exceed the data limit, but don’t want the next charge to occur before 30 days is up. 60 GB is honestly a lot of data to exceed though.
I'm quite surprised they allow credit card deduction now, cause that would incur extra fees for them cutting into their probably pretty thin profit margin on the Jumbo plans.Lets put it very bluntly, Jumbo plans are tailored for foreign workers. Firstly, they do have any credit card to pay monthly bills like locals so they can pay at neighborhood shops. Secondly, the moment they are return to their own country, the line they hold will be terminate automatically once they do not pay for the coming month with no string attached.
Since Zero1 now has the facility to allow credit card deduction, that ease the inconvenience if locals also wanna sign up Jumbo plans.
They have to pay the handphone shops too. Assuming it's $1/txn, it would still be quite a big percentage.I'm quite surprised they allow credit card deduction now, cause that would incur extra fees for them cutting into their probably pretty thin profit margin on the Jumbo plans.
Handphone shops double as a promotion/advertising benefit to them. CC topups only incur extra costs for them with existing customers.They have to pay the handphone shops too. Assuming it's $1/txn, it would still be quite a big percentage.
So actually CC payment isn't going to cost that much more.
I think most of the advertising is for Heya, not Jumbo now.Handphone shops double as a promotion/advertising benefit to them. CC topups only incur extra costs for them with existing customers.
Hmm, Heya is under Singtel, not Zero1.I think most of the advertising is for Heya, not Jumbo now.
Afterall Heya 75Mbps cap would mean lesser chance of network congestion compared to Zero1 Jumbo (which is uncapped).
Zero1 Jumbo was maintained by SingTel to attack SIMBA Telecom through proxy war.Hmm, Heya is under Singtel, not Zero1.
Suspect after Singtel introduce Heya, it is competing with Zero1 Jumbo, so they decided to have credit card payment, which Heya still dont have.
So you mean if Singtel capped the speed it’s better for the customers? Or you mean it’s better for Singtel to manage their network bandwidth?I think most of the advertising is for Heya, not Jumbo now.
Afterall Heya 75Mbps cap would mean lesser chance of network congestion compared to Zero1 Jumbo (which is uncapped).
Won't it be both?So you mean if Singtel capped the speed it’s better for the customers? Or you mean it’s better for Singtel to manage their network bandwidth?
Cause if it’s the former I don’t quite understand as Singtel SIM only plans don’t have cap and customers are paying more.
I mean the part you mentioned “Heya 75Mbps cap would mean lesser chance of network congestion compared to Zero1 Jumbo (which is uncapped).”.Won't it be both?
If network prioritization and speed cap, means the same number of channels would be shared among more customers.
Those willing to pay more, get higher prioritization and therefore likely to enjoy faster performance.
Those unwilling to spend would have to wait for longer.
SingTel Postpaid (normal) would have the highest priority no matter what, it's the question of whether GOMO, MVNO and Prepaid (including Heya) gets the next highest priority.
What I'm trying to say is, imagine a pipe of 450Mbps.I mean the part you mentioned “Heya 75Mbps cap would mean lesser chance of network congestion compared to Zero1 Jumbo (which is uncapped).”.
Meaning to say Heya cap will result in better real world performance (ping and loading times but not max speed) compared to uncap GOMO / Zero1/ Singtel SIM only? This doesn’t make sense unless Heya has cap + higher network prioritisation than the rest.
Thanks for taking the time to write this long explanation and also using the analogy of lanes with toll for understanding. It does make sense to what you have mentioned about everyone will in turn get to enjoy good real world performance with speed cap applied for certain users and also applying network prioritisation.What I'm trying to say is, imagine a pipe of 450Mbps.
If it's uncapped, just one person speedtest and gobble up 200-300Mbps.
Yes, it'll be great for that person. However, for other people, they would be slowed down dramatically.
However, if the same user is capped at 75Mbps, other people in the area would get a higher throughput.
Couple with the fact that latency (ping) is correlated with how fast one packet transmit and receive back, the experience for most would be improved.
To put back into perspective, you must remember who's the main target audience for such plans. Many of them stays together in the same place.
The reason why SIMBA Telecom slows to a crawl in those areas is because the spectrum is not enough for so many users.
SingTel is trying to impose the speed cap to reduce the performance of each user for the short term, but given the fact that the network congestion eases, it'll improve average throughput for all the users in the area.
Those that's willing to pay more would be guaranteed a better performance too.
You can think of it as an expressway which have toll and toll-free lanes. Both have the same number of lanes, but when needed, toll lanes can be added at the expense of the toll-free lanes.
For toll lanes, lesser users are using the lanes, so each driver can get by faster. If congestion, some of the toll-free lane users would be forced to move as the toll gates are added.
However, for toll-free lanes, naturally, more users are using, so it's bound to be slower.
Imagine some toll-free users are driving at peak speeds and some accident happened. It caused some lanes to be blocked, reducing the effective lanes available.
Remember, halving the number of lanes won't just cause average travel duration to double, in fact likely to be much longer.
Therefore, imposing speed cap on those toll-free lanes would reduce the chase of collision would would mean a more predictable and stable experience.
Linking back,
The toll lanes refer to the high paying customers, which are full fledge plan users.
The toll-free lanes can be GOMO, Heya, or MVNOs.
When network congestion, higher capacity is given to full fledge customers, and since the network capacity is fixed due to spectrum allocation, other users would be affected.
The accident refers to those uncapped users that are jamming the network. It would not just affect them as brute-forcing their way through gets limited or no result, it would also make other users suffer from their selfish activities.
Yes, this is a very long message, I took a good 20 mins to write this, but I do hope you get what I mean.
Network prioritization is defined as a QCI number in the LTE network.Thanks for taking the time to write this long explanation and also using the analogy of lanes with toll for understanding. It does make sense to what you have mentioned about everyone will in turn get to enjoy good real world performance with speed cap applied for certain users and also applying network prioritisation.
So in your knowledge, do you think GOMO / Singtel MVNOs (with no speed cap) will perform worst or better or the same compared to Heya (with speed cap)? By performance I mean ping and general load times, not max speed since Heya would lose for sure.
Consequently, I’m just wondering why only Heya is subjected to the speed cap, and not the lower paying customers from GOMO and Singtel MVNOs as well?
Heya customers are probably the lowest paying customer and probably have the highest number of users from that pool (eventually since it only launched recently), followed by GOMO and Singtel MVNOs which are lower paying customer but still have a significant number of users. Disclaimer, I’m just assuming the broad segregation of all customers under Singtel network based on price, as I don’t have internal data for accurate figures, but let’s assume it’s true for simplicity.
In fact GOMO was previously subjected to the same speed cap as Heya. Perhaps the overall traffic is still manageable now so Singtel doesn’t really need to impose speed cap other than for Heya? Or perhaps it’s to differentiate the marketing of features (speed cap, VoLTE etc)?
Latest update...data usage at 5.78gb now. Testing speed using speedtest.sg still shows 120mbps.
Don't know why but it seems to me zero1 uses (eat up) data quite fast too...maybe this is one downside to this mvno.
After 6gb, speed indeed throttles...did 2 tests...1@0.8mpbs 1@1.2mbps.
This week heya going even slower than before. Getting under 50mbps.IMHO.
Heya.SG download now capped at 99 Mbps.