Wednesday, February 23, 2011

This is like...a whole other country

I will admit that when we moved here, I was primarily prepared for language- and culture-based changes from living in the DC Metro area. A lot of what has surprised me, however, has been things that I took for granted as part of the service you receive when you get a cell phone plan or a bank account.

We searched around with all of the mobile phone carriers and were unable to find either a Canadian or US company that would work without enormous fees on both sides of the border. I haven't figured out a way to have a US number that our friends in the States could call to avoid long-distance charges that would forward to a Canadian number, but we at least have Canadian cell phones now so I can give out a phone number that won't be going away when we move out of temporary housing.

The odd part of all this is that Caller ID (which comes on every phone I've ever seen in the US) costs an extra $8 here. This means that you can't just assume someone can call you so you'll have their number, because if you haven't paid extra, the phone just says "Unknown."

The next thing that was odd was that our bank account didn't come with a check card--you know how you get the thing that looks like a credit card and you can run credit or debit with it, right? Here you just get an Interac card, which works like a debit only you have to pay $1.50 every time you use it, and you can't choose to run it as credit instead of debit, or use it at credit-only businesses.

Heck, we opened a checking account, and now I'm wondering if I need to make sure that we're getting sent actual, physical cheques. I was expecting to find that banking was different because the word is spelled "cheques" here, but instead it's feeling fairly different. I kind of know the rules, but if I take things for granted or assume something, I might get screwed, and nobody will think to warn me!

7 comments:

  1. Could Google Voice help out with this? Have an American number that forwards to your Canadian one?

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  2. I was wondering the same thing. It looks like Google Voice calls to Canada are free, so it seems like it might be possible to somehow use GV to solve the problem.

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  3. The Google Voice suggestion is itself a funny example of the subject of this blog post. Google Voice doesn't serve Canada yet. If you go to voice.google.com from a Canadian IP, they tell you they only have service in the US for now (and voice.google.ca doesn't exist). That having been said, if someone in the US could get it set up and have it forwarding to our Canadian numbers, that could certainly be interesting.

    VOIP in general seems like it'll be the solution for calling. We're looking at getting home phone service that uses VOIP to give us unlimited calling within Canada and the US. But then you have to realize that it costs an arm and a leg to not have a monthly data limit on your ISP (and thanks to legislation, unlimited plans may be going away entirely), so VOIP has some related costs here as well.

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  4. IM me about this. We could at least try to set something up.

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  5. I'm remembering an incident in a drugstore in New Brunswick. Went something like this:

    CLERK: Credit or debit?
    ME: Debit.
    CLERK: That's a credit card.
    ME: No, it's a debit card.
    CLERK: It says Visa on it.
    ME: Yeah, but it's a debit card. Look, it says "Debit" right here.
    CLERK: But it says Visa on it.
    ME: Yeeees, but...oh, never mind.

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  6. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  7. Speaking of Data rate caps... I saw this a bit ago and thought of (worried for?) you two: http://www.gottabemobile.com/wp-content/uploads/canada-isp-limit-bandwidth.png

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