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Sporkman
September 26th, 2007, 03:01 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070926/tc_nm/africa_beeping_dc_1



Phone credit low? Africans go for "beeping"

By Andrew Heavens Tue Sep 25, 8:40 PM ET

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - If you are in Sudan it is a "missed call." In Ethiopia it is a "miskin" or a "pitiful" call. In other parts of Africa it is a case of "flashing," "beeping" or in French-speaking areas "bipage."

Wherever you are, it is one of the fastest-growing phenomena in the continent's booming mobile telephone markets -- and it's a headache for mobile operators who are trying to figure out how to make some money out of it.

You beep someone when you call them up on their mobile phone -- setting its display screen briefly flashing -- then hang up half a second later, before they have had a chance to answer. Your friend -- you hope -- sees your name and number on their list of "Missed Calls" and calls you back at his or her expense.

It is a tactic born out of ingenuity and necessity, say analysts who have tracked an explosion in miskin calls by cash-strapped cellphone users from Cape Town to Cairo.

"Its roots are as a strategy to save money," said Jonathan Donner, an India-based researcher for Microsoft who is due to publish a paper on "The Rules of Beeping" in the high-brow online Journal of Computer Mediated Communication in October.

Donner first came across beeping in Rwanda, then tracked it across the continent and beyond, to south and southeast Asia. Studies quoted in his paper estimate between 20 to more than 30 percent of the calls made in Africa are just split-second flashes -- empty appeals across the cellular network.

The beeping boom is being driven by a sharp rise in mobile phone use across the continent.

Africa had an estimated 192.5 million mobile phone users in 2006, up from just 25.3 million in 2001, according to figures from the U.N.'s International Telecommunication Union. Customers may have enough money for the one-off purchase of a handset, but very little ready cash to spend on phone cards for the prepaid accounts that dominate the market.

Africa's mobile phone companies say the practice has become so widespread they have had to step in to prevent their circuits being swamped by second-long calls.

"We have about 355 million calls across the whole network every day," said Faisal Ijaz Khan, chief marketing officer for the Sudanese arm of Kuwaiti mobile phone operator Zain (formerly MTC). "And then there are another 130 million missed calls every day. There are a lot of missed calls in Africa."

"CALL ME BACK"

Zain is responding to the demand by drawing up plans for a "Call-me-back" service in Sudan, letting customers send open requests in the form of a very basic signal to friends for a phone call.

The main advantage for the company is that the requests will be diverted from the main network and pushed through using a much cheaper technology (USSD or Unstructured Supplementary Service Data).

A handful of similar schemes are springing up across Africa, says Informa principal analyst Devine Kofiloto. "It is widespread. It is a concern for operators in African countries, whose networks become congested depending on the time of day with calls they cannot bill for.

"They try to discourage the practice by introducing services where customers can send a limited number of 'call-back' request either free of charge or for a minimum fee."

There are plenty of other reasons why mobile operators are keen to cut down on the practice. One is it annoys customers, pestered by repeated missed calls.

A second is that 'flashes' eat into one of mobile phone companies' favorite performance indicators -- ARPU or average revenue per user. Miscalls earn very little in themselves - and don't always persuade the target to ring back.

Orange Senegal, Kofiloto said, lets customers send a 'Rappelle moi' ('Call me back') when their phone credit drops below $0.10. With Safaricom Kenya, it is a "Flashback 130" (limited to five a day -- and with the admonishment 'Stop Flashing! Ask Nicely'). Vodacom DR Congo's 'Rappelez moi SVP' service costs $0.01 a message.

MORE THAN MONEY

But beeping is not only about money. Donner's 'Rules of Beeping' suggests a social protocol for the practice.

"The richer guy pays," he writes. It is acceptable to beep someone if you are short of cash and they are flush with credit. Never beep someone poorer than you.

Never beep someone you are tapping for a favor. You don't want to risk annoying the person you are trying to win over. Never flash your girlfriend, unless you want to look cheap.

"Most beeps are requests to the mobile owner to call back immediately, but can also send a pre-negotiated instrumental message such as pick me up now,' or send a relational sign, such as I'm thinking of you,"' the paper says.

It can go even further than that.

Cameroonian researchers Victor W.A. Mbarika and Irene Mbarika identified a different kind of beeping-powered relational call in a study for the technology association the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).

"Lovers often communicate with text messages or beeping'," said the study. "One party dials another's number and then hangs up. One ring could mean, I am here,' two rings, Call me now."'

And the name they gave this new entry in the beeping lexicon? Borrowing a street slang term for an appeal for sex, they christened it "the booty call."

maagimies
September 26th, 2007, 03:06 PM
I used to do this all the time when I was on my last minutes with my prepaid connection, nothing new here :D

argie
September 26th, 2007, 03:45 PM
This is very common in India really. Atleast it was, till recently. People would say, "I'll give you a missed call when if I want you to wait." or stuff like that. This "missed call" is that hanging up before they can pick up thing. Unfortunately, if the other person is messaging on that phone, they'll probably pick up the call.

Rates have dropped quite a bit recently though, and I haven't heard the "Send me a missed call" line in a long while now.

bobbocanfly
September 26th, 2007, 03:54 PM
Always doing this. Nothing new at all.

Doesnt always work though especially among my mates, noone actually has credit. Works perfectly for phoning home though.

Buffalo Soldier
September 26th, 2007, 04:10 PM
In Malaysia it's called "tembak", meaning "shoot" in English. Example "tembak aku bila kau dah sampai" = "shoot me when you have arrived". I guess everyone missed calls when they are low on credit.

matthew
September 26th, 2007, 04:35 PM
Extremely common here in Morocco. Locally it has come to be the equivalent of "Hi, I'm thinking about you" with no further need to say anything. The typical response is to ring back the same way.

mips
September 26th, 2007, 05:05 PM
Pretty common here. We also have a "Please call me" service. You can send that predetermined text to another subsciber for free.

joep
September 26th, 2007, 05:43 PM
I do it at work all the time. They pay my managers bill but not mine. :)

bigbrovar
September 26th, 2007, 05:56 PM
maagimies
Re: Phone credit low? Africans go for "beeping"
I used to do this all the time when I was on my last minutes with my prepaid connection, nothing new here


argie
Re: Phone credit low? Africans go for "beeping"
This is very common in India really. Atleast it was, till recently. People would say, "I'll give you a missed call when if I want you to wait." or stuff like that. This "missed call" is that hanging up before they can pick up thing. Unfortunately, if the other person is messaging on that phone, they'll probably pick up the call.

Rates have dropped quite a bit recently though, and I haven't heard the "Send me a missed call" line in a long while now.





bobbocanfly
Re: Phone credit low? Africans go for "beeping"
Always doing this. Nothing new at all.

Doesnt always work though especially among my mates, noone actually has credit. Works perfectly for phoning home though.



Buffalo Soldier
Re: Phone credit low? Africans go for "beeping"
In Malaysia it's called "tembak", meaning "shoot" in English. Example "tembak aku bila kau dah sampai" = "shoot me when you have arrived". I guess everyone missed calls when they are low on credit.


matthew
Re: Phone credit low? Africans go for "beeping"
Extremely common here in Morocco. Locally it has come to be the equivalent of "Hi, I'm thinking about you" with no further need to say anything. The typical response is to ring back the same way.


mips
Re: Phone credit low? Africans go for "beeping"
Pretty common here. We also have a "Please call me" service. You can send that predetermined text to another subsciber for free.



joep
Re: Phone credit low? Africans go for "beeping"
I do it at work all the time. They pay my managers bill but not mine.




soo u see Sporkman even pple in asia,europe and the americas do it..please stop stereotyping Africans :mad:

BDNiner
September 26th, 2007, 06:09 PM
I do this also when i am back in africa. not because it is cheap, but because i hate checking voice mails. Especially because something that should only take 2-3 button presses normally takes a lot more and i hate the generic slow voice on the voice mail system. I tell all my friends to beep me, i will call you back.

mips
September 26th, 2007, 06:11 PM
soo u see Sporkman even pple in asia,europe and the americas do it..please stop stereotyping Africans :mad:

Uhm, you quoted me and I'm from africa...

Sporkman
September 26th, 2007, 06:22 PM
soo u see Sporkman even pple in asia,europe and the americas do it..please stop stereotyping Africans :mad:

Hey now, I'm just reporting the news. :) I was not aware of the wide proliferation of the practice, and did not intend to single out anybody.

bigbrovar
September 26th, 2007, 06:35 PM
Uhm, you quoted me and I'm from africa...

Oh am sorry
..yeah even south africans do it ...

mridkash
September 26th, 2007, 06:36 PM
I went for internship with 3 of my friends and we usually called missed call as "Missing You Call"

matthew
September 26th, 2007, 07:02 PM
Uhm, you quoted me and I'm from africa...Morocco is also in Africa. :)

popch
September 26th, 2007, 07:17 PM
That used to be done with snail mail, 'back when' the recipient had to pay for mail delivery. Lovers used to agree on some 'coding scheme' involving the colors of the ribbons on the letters.

The postman presented the letter, the recipient noted the sender and the color of the ribbon, then refused to accept the letter.

That was part of the reason why they invented postage stamps.

It must be true, I have read it in a book. :)

mips
September 26th, 2007, 07:24 PM
Morocco is also in Africa. :)

lol, for some odd reason I keep thinking you are in Arizona even though I know you moved a long time ago.

matthew
September 26th, 2007, 07:27 PM
lol, for some odd reason I keep thinking you are in Arizona even though I know you moved a long time ago.:)

Part of me will always be in Arizona.

regomodo
September 26th, 2007, 08:12 PM
this is news? I used to do it all the time when i was a lot younger with no money and a crappy motorola brick

mcduck
September 26th, 2007, 08:39 PM
Yeah, people used to do that quite a lot some years ago. But now the phone calls are so cheap it doesn't really matter.

Although we still often use it when there actually isn't anything that would require talking. For example if I'm waiting for my friend to pick me up with a car I'll tell him to beep me when he's at the parking lot so I'll know to come out.