you use there phone number
write 0061 and the persons you are texting number without a zero in front of it
get a new phone mate
Yes, provided that the mobile user has enabled international roaming. You just enter the Australian mobile number exactly the same way you do when it is in Australia.
You should be able to, by substituting country code +44 for the leading 0 of the UK mobile number. For example, 07700 900123 becomes +447700900123.
if you're sending an sms to someone using an Australian provider then nothing changes. if the person is using a UK provider simply delete the first zero and replace it with +44
To call an Australian mobile phone, you dial the Australian mobile number. It does not matter if the mobile phone is physically in Australia, Honolulu, or anywhere else.
try dialling 00353 before the number
To call from the US to an Australian mobile phone, dial 011 = international access prefix 61 = country code for Australia the Australian mobile number, omitting the leading 0 To call an Australian mobile that is roaming in the US, dial the Australian number as you normally would.
Exactly the same way you send a text to that mobile if it's in America.
yes
There isn't really such a thing as a mobile Lottery as they are open to all to participate in. There are however mobile lottery applications where you can get the latest Irish Lottery Results for instance live in your iPhone or other mobile phone.
To send a text to a North American (USA, Canada, etc.) mobile phone from an Australian mobile phone (or any GSM mobile anywhere in the world), simply prefix the North American area code and number with country code +1. For example, to send a text to (212) 555-0123, send it to +12125550123.(The plus sign means "insert your international access prefix here." From a GSM mobile phone, you can enter the number in full international format, starting with the plus sign. The most common prefix is 00, but North America (USA, Canada, etc.) uses 011, Japan uses 010, Australia uses 0011, and many other countries use different prefixes.)