mobile

Pre-paid mobile subscribers face tight deadline for data reconciliation in Hungary

call-phone-sim cards

Budapest, May 8 (MTI) – Hungarian telecommunication companies may face a rush of activity in the coming weeks as a deadline for registering pre-paid subscribers approaches, business daily Világgazdaság said on Monday.

Hungarian lawmakers tightened rules on pre-paid SIM cards last year amid concerns they could be easily resold to criminals or terrorists. The rules now require data reconciliation for all pre-paid subscribers by the end of June.

Magyar Telekom pre-paid subscribers may register their data online or on the telephone. Telenor pre-paid subscribers may only confirm their data in stores at present, but the telco is “working on” allowing data reconciliation online and on the telephone. Vodafone subscribers may register in shops or on the phone, and the company will soon put up an online platform for registration, too.

The data reconciliation rules could affect “several million” SIM cards.

The contracts of subscribers who fail to comply with the registration rules will be cancelled after the deadline passes, Világgazdaság said.

The brand new application, the selFINA started with a record at the Széchenyi Thermal Bath

Budapest saw a very unique, FINA World Championships-related record being born over the weekend: more than 160 people took selfies simultaneously in one of the pools of the world famous Széchenyi Bath. The photos were taken with the brand new #selFINA mobile application. The freshly set water-record has already been registered into the Book of Hungarian Records.

The record-breaking strongly linked to the 17th FINA World Championships and the World Water Day took place at the Széchenyi Thermal Bath at the heart of Budapest. It was the first time that more than one hundred people took selfies in a pool at the same time. Thanks to the special, newly developed #selFINA mobile app, the participants were also able to take photos and selfies with the two beloved mascots of Budapest 2017, Lili and Lali.

Thanks to the ’augmented reality’ feature of the #selFINA app, anyone can take a virtual tour of the 17th FINA World Championships’ venues as well as look at the most beautiful and famous sights of the Hungarian capital. The freshly inaugurated World Championships countdown clock installation – located on Erzsébet Square, one of the most central, busiest location of Budapest – also provides exciting games and fun selfie-taking opportunities for the public. (The #selFINA application is already available for iOS, and soon for all devices through the Google Play Store free of charge).

Participants of the record-setting and the general bath public were able to enjoy a very spectacular cheerleader show and an exclusive performance by the Hungarian national synchronised swimming team, too. Szofi Kiss and Luca Rényi were among the performing athletes, as well as coach Sára Tringer. The national snychro team truly amazed the spectators by presenting the choreography intended for the actual competition of the 17th FINA World Championships. Along the idea of national head coach Natalia Tarasova, the performance’s accompanying music strongly builds on traditional Hungarians melodies and motifs, making it even more touching.

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The Hungarian Book of Records has authenticated the new record under the name of the Budapest 2017 Organising Committee.

The 17th FINA World Championships will take place between July 14 and 30 this year in Budapest and Balatonfüred. The Event is of the largest volume that Hungary has ever hosted so far, it is a great honour for the entire country and nation to become the center of international attention in July.

Photo: FINA-Budapest

Hungary’s mobile telecommunications market can still grow

Budapest, February 20 (MTI) – Hungary’s mobile telecommunications market can still grow, the chief executive of the country’s biggest telephone company said in Monday’s issue of business daily Világgazdaság.

“Growth does not have to come at the expense of [a competitor], the whole market may expand,” Magyar Telekom CEO Christopher Mattheisen told the paper when asked about room for expansion on a market with 11 million mobile subscriptions among 10 million Hungarians.

“Mobile penetration didn’t stop at 100 percent on other markets either. It isn’t uncommon for penetration to reach as high as 140-150 percent,” he added.

Mattheisen acknowledged that broadcasting company Digi’s recent entry into the mobile market would “boost competition”, but noted that when Vodafone entered the market in 1999, penetration also grew.

“It’s always interesting when a new player enters the market, so I think we’re looking at an exciting year. But what doesn’t change is that the kind of integration [Magyar] Telekom offers is something none of our competitors, including the latest, can produce,” he said.

Read the original article in Hungarian HERE.

Survey reveals what Hungarians use their smart phones for

According to a survey conducted by e-Net and Telekom that was sent to MTI, almost 90% of the Hungarian Internet users – approximately 4.5 million people – use smart phones, including 3.4 million people reading news, articles, e-books, 2.4 million people using their smart phones for listening to music and other audiovisual contents, and 1.8 million people using them for watching films, videos.

Based on the survey, MTI reported that 86% of the 1011 internet users older than 18 age visit primarily news portals, and 80% of them visit social websites for reading. Reading electronic newspapers, magazines (39%), blogs (29%) and e-books (14%) on smart phone is less popular. It also turned out that the most visited news portals are Index (64%), Origo (55%), Hir 24 (45%) and HVG (40%).

The spreading of listening to music on smart phone is not surprising. However, listening to MP3 audio files, mainly those not requiring internet connection, were more widespread earlier. Today, listening to music online for free – like YouTube – is just as popular, MTI told.

At the same time, the number of opportunities for listening to music online is rising. 25% listen to live web radio, and 13% listen to online music streaming on their smart phones (for instance, Spotify, Deezer, Google Play Music).
Nine out of ten still use wifi for streaming, but the ratio of those who use mobile Internet for it, has risen to 42%.

When it comes to watching films and videos on smart phones, 83% of the respondents use free online sources, and only 43% download them to their phones. Watching TV on smart phone is becoming more and more popular: 31% watch some programs on smart phone, 29% use it for re-watch. Only 4% choose streamings with subscription.

Copy editor: bm

News portals, social media most read on Hungarians’ smartphones

Budapest, January 25 (MTI) – News portals and social media sites are what Hungarians read the most on their smartphones, according to a survey by eNet and Telekom.

The representative survey of a sample of more than 1,000 internet users showed 86 percent of Hungarians use their smartphones to read news portals, while 80 percent use them to visit social media sites. Fully 39 percent read electronic newspapers or magazines on their phones, while 29 percent read blogs and just 14 percent read ebooks.

The most visited news portal in Hungary is Index, with 64 percent of internet-using smartphone owners saying they read the site. Runner-up is Origo (55 percent), followed by Hir24 (45 percent) and HVG (40 percent).

Sziget Festival stickers now available on Viber

Viber, one of the leading global messaging apps, and Sziget Festival have announced the launch of a Special Party Sticker Pack. The official “Szitizen” stickers will become available today for free download by all festival and music lovers across Europe.

Hungary’s Sziget Festival fans now have the opportunity to share festival’s positive energy and passion through Viber’s globally popular platform thanks to Sziget’s unique and expressive Sticker Pack.

Viber and Sziget continue to build the future of festival communications and a truly special festival experience. As a pioneer initiative of the two partners, the special festival sticker pack is now available for download, including 30 fun stickers that express festival vibes and emotions in order to bring local and international festival-goers closer to each other and their loved ones.

„Viber and Sziget started a long-term strategic partnership this summer, when we introduced a one of a kind, exclusive, totally free service: personal festival messages sent in real time to visitors’ Viber phones during the festival. Festival lovers also followed Sziget Public Chat for live updates and enjoyed main stage surprises with our Kiss Cam. Sziget’s sticker pack is the next but surely not the last step of the cooperation towards creating the most expressive festival communication out there”, said Atanas Raykov, General Manager CEE of Viber.

Sziget is celebrating the 25th edition of the Island of Freedom in 2017, a hallmark event for which Viber users will be able to get all the exclusive information through their favorite messaging app. „We are preparing several innovative surprises for Szitizens before and during the 25th Sziget Festival – as we strive to create an unforgettable festival experience for them. We are also happy and excited to launch our Sticker Pack on Viber as the next milestone of our collaboration. It is our desire to make the package full of fun, just like Sziget, so that the people of the Island of Freedom will love it”, added Tamas Kadar, General Manager of Sziget.

Download now Sziget’s Sticker Pack for free:
http://stickers.viber.com/pages/szigetfestival

Follow Sziget Public Chat for exclusive content from the festival: http://chats.viber.com/sziget

New functionalities, full accessibility: BKK FUTÁR application updated

BKK’s journey planner, the FUTÁR app, has been updated to offer more accurate travel information and a wider set of functions to fully assist blind and visually impaired customers and also to include new functionalities requested by users, such as the options to save favourite lines, to display ticket sales points and to access maps offline. The app has been updated on smartphones and tablets where automatic updates are enabled; otherwise, updates are available through the iOS, Android and Windows app stores. The ever popular BKK FUTÁR app with more than 275 thousand daily users enables real-time journey planning and map-based vehicle location. This is the third major update since the application’s launch in 2014.

Users have provided valuable feedback about the BKK FUTÁR application since its launch in the autumn of 2014, assisting in the development and fine-tuning of the real-time journey planner that makes travelling in the city easier and faster. Based on summer data, the app has more than 275 thousand active users. This current update contributes to a better customer experience by the addition of new functionalities and more exact travel data.

Favourite lines

Based on user requests, not only favourite locations and stops but also favourite lines can now be saved and stored and will be displayed on top of the list on the screen showing departure times and services nearby.

Ticket sales point display

Sales points can now be displayed on the map, which is a helpful tool for those who do not have a ticket or pass before starting their journey. The function can be switched on or off and displays the locations and working hours of TVMs, ticket offices, customer service centres, distributors (such as post offices, newsagents etc.), so buying a ticket in the evening or night hours is made easy. The app also calculates with the time required for ticket purchase.

Offline static maps

A new menu item of the app is the collection of maps that are also available on the BKK website at http://bkk.hu/en/maps/ : Budapest and city centre public transport, metro and suburban railway network, daytime and night transport services etc. Maps marked as favourites can be accessed offline, too.

Journey-planning also for blind and visually impaired customers

The BKK FUTÁR app has already been available to blind and visually impaired customers with iOS and Android devices thanks to screen-reader software applications currently on the market, but several screens of the app have not been readable. This update fixes the problem, so that searching for departures and journey-planning become possible with the help of the built-in screen reader function that was tested by blind software developers. On iOS devices the VoiceOver, while on Android systems the TalkBack function needs to be turned on and configured. (No screen reader software is available for Windows devices yet)

More accurate departure times

Thanks to the new BKK FUTÁR algorithm used for calculations, more accurate expected departure times can be shown both via the app and online at futar.bkk.hu. The new algorithm takes into consideration the actual previous journey times on the same route, so that for instance if on a certain route the trip regularly takes longer than is shown in the official timetable, the system will calculate with that and predict longer waiting times.

Updates and links

The BKK FUTÁR app has been updated on smartphones and tablets where automatic updates are enabled; otherwise, updates are available through the iOS, Android and Windows app stores.

Please find the app at the following links:

  • iOS: https://itunes.apple.com/hu/app/bkk-futar/id916193835?mt=8
  • Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=hu.webvalto.bkkfutar&hl=hu
  • Windows: https://www.microsoft.com/hu-hu/store/p/bkk-futar/9wzdncrdm4h6

National security committee calls for stricter international regulations on SIM cards

Budapest (MTI) – Members of parliament’s national security committee said on Wednesday that stricter international regulations or at least pan-European regulations were needed for the purchase of unregistered SIM cards.

Several members told the press after a meeting of the committee that even if Hungary introduced security restrictions, organized criminal gangs would still be able to buy pay-as-you-go cards in other European countries.

Committee head Zsolt Molnár, of the opposition Socialists, said that Hungary plans to introduce rules that allow only a limited number of SIM cards to be bought by private individuals or companies.

Deputy head Szilárd Németh, of the ruling Fidesz, said that the number is planned to be limited to 20 for private individuals and 100 for companies.

According to recent press reports, organized criminals obtained large quantities of SIM cards in Hungary, many of which are believed to have ended up in the hands of terrorists.

Ádám Mirkóczki of opposition Jobbik noted consensus among the parliamentary groups of parties, the interior ministry, authorities and mobile service providers on the need to amend rules in an effort “to eliminate loopholes”.

LMP’s Bernadett Szél welcomed the proposal to change the regulations, saying that her party agreed with making security a priority. LMP will be a partner and support the enactment of new regulations, she said.

Hungarian authority in talks with telecom companies over SIM cards – UPDATE

Budapest, October 7 (MTI) – In the wake of recent reports of organised criminals obtaining large quantities of SIM cards in Hungary, the government and telecommunications authority (NMHH) are in talks with mobile phone companies operating in the country on alerting the authorities to suspected activity.

The daily Magyar Idők cited interior ministry sources as saying that the government would soon make a related proposal on taking national security interests into account in cases of such transactions.

 

The paper said the prime minister and several members of the cabinet as well as counter-terrorism heads have already discussed the issue of SIM cards, and they are examining the possibility of amending the relevant laws or other options for obliging service providers to take appropriate action in similar cases.

The paper noted reports of organised criminals having obtained 200,000 T-Mobile SIM cards by using the identity of a homeless person. A large number of these ended up being used by the terrorist cell that plotted and carried out the Paris and Brussels attacks.

UPDATE

The spokesman of the opposition Democratic Coalition, Zsolt Gréczy, told MTI that Belgian and French authorities had warned Hungary’s counter-terrorism force (TEK) that the perpetrators of the terrorist attacks had obtained SIM cards in Hungary. Even though the law provides for day-to-day consultations with mobile phone providers, the fact that 200,000 SIM cards had been bought under false pretenses had not come to the prior notice of either the Hungarian secret services or the TEK, Gréczy said, adding that it was now time to abolish the TEK and put Hungarian counter-terrorism on a professional footing.

The ruling Fidesz party said in response that DK would put the security of Hungarians at risk purely to serve party political aims. In a statement, Fidesz said that had it depended on DK’s leader, Ferenc Gyurcsány, the forced settlement of migrants would have gone ahead and “terrorists would be free to settle down in Hungary”.

Two Hungarian startups are among the best

Deutsche Telekom organized its yearly Telekom Innovation Contest to find and support new talents and technologies which could then be connected to Deutsche Telekom’s business division and its subsidiaries, innoportal.hu writes.

2016 is the first year when the event chain’s final event, the Telekom Innovation Expo, is going to be public. After Berlin and Krakow, Budapest will host the event on 23 May as part of the SMART 2016 conference.

Organizers of the Telekom Innovation Contest welcomed applicants from all over the world, including Hungary, in the categories of Smart Data Analytics, Future Communication, Industry, and IoT. Applicants had to display at least one working prototype during the exhibition.

Hungary’s biggest startup conference, the SMART 2016 conference will be held simultaneously with the Telekom Innovation Contest, so visitors can choose from a variety of programmes. The Contest’s top 10 participants will introduce their products, including the Hungarian PersonalVideo and Slamby.

PersonalVideo makes unique, interactive videos using any database, and Slamby provides a big data management platform for companies with automated categorization and language-independency.

One of the main goals of Telekom’s contest is to find startups that could define the present and the future of info communication industry, and might become Telekom’s potential partners, Mátyás Dobó, director of Magyar Telekom Product House, said. Supporting innovative technologies is an important aspect of Telekom’s business policy, and among the many unique and great applications, two Hungarians managed to get into the top 10 in 2016.

The event will be opened by Christopher Mattheisen, CEO of Magyar Telekom, and besides the top 10 contestants, others will be present as well, such as Ádám Somlai-Fischer, co-founder of Prezi, and Patrick Cowden, founder of Beyond Leadership, who gave leadership advice to many international companies before (e.g. DELL, HP, HITACHI, and Coca-Cola). Representatives of Deutsche Telekom’s business division and directors of national companies will also participate in the event.

Copy editor: bm

Telekom to launch a new service and offer free calls

There are many options if someone doesn’t want to pay for a call but still has internet connection: the Messenger, WhatsApp, and the like applications let us call anyone, anytime, for free. First among the phone companies, Telekom is going to launch a similar service, but neither the caller nor the receiver will need to have internet connection, hvg.hu writes. Customers can use it for voice-and video calls, and also for sending messages.

Immmr combines traditional phone calls and the more modern internet based calls: the customer receives a phone number which can be used by any devices. Our numbers become “virtual”; they are associated with the owner, but there’s no need for a specific phone or a SIM card. Deutsche Telekom introduced the new service during the MWC 2016 exhibition in Barcelona.

Immmr is expected to arrive to Hungary and Slovakia first: customers with iOS and Android operating systems will be able to download the application for free from the second half of 2016. It can be used to make voice- and video calls and sending messages.

The company said that Immmr is unique despite the fact that it’s similar to other applications that require online connection (such as Facebook Messenger, Skype, or WhatsApp). Telekom’s new service combines the traditional technique with the more modern internet based system: it will use whichever the best seems in the given situation. In other words, if we decide to call someone either through the application or the online surface, we can do it for free, even if the receiver (mobile or land line) does not have an internet connection.

Copy editor: bm

Tesco pulls Hungarian mobile virtual network operator

Budapest, February 24 (MTI) – Mobile virtual network operator Tesco Mobile, a joint venture established by the local units of UK retailer Tesco and telco Vodafone in 2011, is pulling out of Hungary, daily Magyar Idok said on Wednesday.

Tesco Mobile subscribers have been informed they will be taken over by Vodafone from mid-April, the paper said.

NBH finds no evidence of market manipulation in Magyar Telekom cancelled contracts trading probe

Budapest, January 12 (MTI) – The National Bank of Hungary found no evidence of insider trading or market manipulation in a probe related to the announcement of the cancellation of some government contracts with Magyar Telekom, a reply to an opposition MP by the central bank and financial market watchdog shows.

“Information available to the NBH as part of its market monitoring activity as well as publically available information did not raise any suspicion of insider trading or market manipulation that would require the launch of an oversight procedure,” central bank governor Gyorgy Matolcsy said in a written response to Socialist MP Bertalan Toth posted on the website of Parliament.

Magyar Telekom’s share price fell after the announcement on December 17 that the government would cancel some contracts with the company but recovered ground later in the trading session. The government took the decision after Magyar Telekom cancelled its sponsorship contract with the popular musician Akos Kovacs over remarks he made on the role of women.

Photo: technokrata.hu

Hungarians lose tens of thousands of smartphones at New Year

Budapest (MTI) – According to estimations, tens of thousands of smartphones are mislaid at New Year’s parties in Hungary, a consultant to Sicontact, the distributor of IT security company ESET in Hungary, told MTI on Friday.

Peter Beres added that “knowing the nosiness of Hungarians” and in light of the fact that most phones are not secured, over 60 percent of those who find a loose phone will have a look at its contents.

Citing an ESET survey, Beres said that 138,000 cellphones and laptops are lost in the UK at Christmas parties, and 64 percent of those devices have no data protection.

The British study was based on a survey of 600 bars, and concluded that an average 12 phones or laptops are left at one place, and 83 percent of them are returned to their owners. Nearly two-thirds of the respondents said they would peep into a phone found if it was not locked.

Photo: MTI

Fidesz: Telekom cancellation of singer’s sponsorship deal reminiscent of Communist era

Budapest (MTI) – Magyar Telekom’s decision to cancel a sponsorship agreement with Hungarian pop singer Akos Kovacs over his comments on the role of women in society is reminiscent of the cultural policy of Communist Hungary, the ruling Fidesz party’s parliamentary group leader said on Sunday.

“Comrade [Gyorgy] Aczel walks among us,” Lajos Kosa said, referring to the prominent culture minister of the Communist era.

On Wednesday Magyar Telekom, the local unit of Deutsche Telekom, decided to cancel its sponsorship agreement with Kovacs over the singer’s comments on the role of women.

“The role of women is not to make as much money as men,” the singer said in an interview with private television channel Echo TV. When asked what the role of women was, the singer said it was “belonging to someone, giving birth … being mothers”.

Kosa said Kovacs has a right to express his private opinion, and anyone who disagrees with him should have challenged that opinion instead of taking revenge. The Fidesz group leader said Telekom’s move was reminiscent of Aczel’s cultural policy in the Communist era, which viewed art on the basis of political affiliation instead of cultural value.

As a counterexample, Kosa noted that Robert Alfoldi, the former director of the National Theatre, was invited as a tour guide to a local government institution in Debrecen, in eastern Hungary, when he was locked in a tight battle for directorship of the National Theatre with Fidesz-backed Attila Vidnyanszky. “We supported Vidnyanszky,” Kosa said, adding, however that the Debrecen leadership never considered not inviting Alfoldi.

Kosa insisted that he wholeheartedly agrees with House Speaker Laszlo Kover’s opinion expressed at last week’s Fidesz congress that “family does not get in the way of women’s self-fulfillment.”

The group leader noted that since 2010, the government has implemented a number of benefits for women to help them align their careers with their maternal responsibilities: child support benefits have been increased, kindergarten entry age has been lowered and women have also been given the chance to retire early after 40 years of work.

Photo: MTI

Orban: Akos vs. Magyar Telekom case raises constitutional concerns

Daily News Hungary

Brussels, December 18 (MTI) – The dispute between pop singer Akos Kovacs and Magyar Telekom “may seem minor [but it raises] important theoretical and constitutional questions”, Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Friday.

On Thursday, the government instructed its ministries to cancel their mobile internet contracts with Magyar Telekom which objected the singer’s comments in a television interview in which he said: “The role of women is to belong to someone, give birth [and] be mothers”.

The government’s response is only symbolic, as mobile internet contracts account for just 0.1% of MT’s revenue, the cabinet chief, Antal Rogan said earlier today. “MT will not lose too much money as a result,” he added.

Answering a question at a press conference after an EU summit in Brussels, Orban said the case was about the freedom of expression. It is a government obligation to ensure that parties have an opportunity to put their opinion forward even if others may disagree.

“The question is whether an international company can punish someone because it does not like that person’s views,” Orban said. He noted that Magyar Telekom is a government strategic partner and “it must respect values that are protected by the Hungarian constitution”.

All ministries to cancel contracts with Magyar Telekom – Update

Budapest, December 17 (MTI) – The government has instructed all ministries and their institutions to cancel their contracts with Magyar Telekom, the local unit of Deutsche Telekom, government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs told MTI.

Kovacs said that the move would affect mobile internet subscriptions, but added that cancellations of the contracts would not impact the partnership agreement between Telekom and the Hungarian government. Kovacs also added that exact number of such contracts with ministries and their agencies was being surveyed.

Kovacs said the move comes as a response to Magyar Telekom’s decision to cancel its sponsorship agreement with Hungarian pop singer Akos Kovacs over comments he made about the role of women in society.

“The role of women is not to make as much money as men,” the singer said in an interview with television channel Echo. When asked what the role of women was, the singer said it was “belonging to someone, giving birth … being mothers”.

The government spokesman said Magyar Telekom’s cancelling of Akos Kovacs’s sponsorship agreement goes against “both the spirit and the letter” of the constitution. “Such a move might be acceptable in Germany, but we believe it is unacceptable to discriminate against someone for their beliefs like this in Hungary.”

House Speaker Laszlo Kover also said last week that Hungarian women should consider giving birth the “highest form of self-fulfillment”.

According to the opposition Socialists, the move signals an “advanced level of customised government”. Socialist leader Jozsef Tobias said that while the government overlooked a “collapsing” health care system, it put on its agenda such items as a “medieval” remark “by a citizen” degrading women into second-rate residents. He insisted that Fidesz’s “minions” could in any awkward situation rely on the government’s “even more awkward” support.

The Egyutt (Together) party said that the government’s “petty revenge” was indicative of its sharing the pop singer’s “one-sided” views about women.

In its statement, Egyutt noted that Telekom was a privately owned company, which could sponsor anyone, while the government will terminate “public procurement contracts negotiated using taxpayers’ money”.

While Akos Kovacs has the right to have his own view of the world, it is unacceptable that the ruling parties should adopt those views as a government policy, Egyutt said, adding that the government spokesman was referring to the freedom of opinion as a “hypocritical and false” excuse.

The Liberal Party said in a statement that the move could not be taken in any rule of law. They said the government’s “retaliation” was triggered by a “personal insult to the prime minister’s favourite singer and friend”. The government of a democratic country must not take revenge because a private company disagrees with the views of the house speaker or a pop star, and refuses to support or share their position.

“Orban will inflict punishment, which conveys the message that anyone will be punished if they refuse to share the hypocritical values of Fidesz and have a different opinion,” the Liberal statement said.

The Dialogue for Hungary (PM) party said that the prime minister “had better focus on the country’s problems rather than those of his favourite musician”. In a statement sent to MTI, PM called on the government to respect the decisions of private companies and spare efforts to “protect their minion who has elicited a public uproar”.

A spokesman for the green LMP party said that the government was “again mixing up private and public interests”. Retaliating for “alleged or actual” offences on artists close to the government is not a government responsibility, Jozsef Gal said in his statement

Photo: http://www.hwsw.hu/

How many days do you have to work for an iPhone around the world?

A fashionable gadget certainly has the price. But do you know how many hours you have to work to buy the latest iPhone? – hir24.hu asks.

The biggest attraction of the Apple phone is not its processor or even the number of pixels, but the “look I have an iPhone” factor. People simply just want it, mostly because it has the logo.

It is no coincidence that the current phone of Apple is often used as an index number in “well-being index” studies, in addition to benchmarks like McDonald’s iconic sandwich. We know that UBS analyst firm calculates time to time that, based on the average salary and average prices, in which country and how much you have to work to buy a Big Mac (it is 44 minutes in Hungary). However, it is a novelty that we can learn how many hours or days we have to work to buy the cheapest iPhone 6s model.

In Europe, we can buy it the fastest in Switzerland, it needs only 20 hours. Globally, New York does not fall behind much, we have to work 24 hours for the phone. Paris and London residents have to spend nearly twice as much time, 42 hours in their workplaces. 158 hours of wages is sufficient to buy the Apple mobile in Moscow, hir24.hu wrote.

Six weeks working for the 6

But what about Hungary? According to UBS, Hungarians have to work 219 hours for the 16GB iPhone 6s. Calculated with 8 hours of work a day, it is more than 27 days, that is 5 and half working weeks. And all this so we do not eat, pay rent and overheads. Otherwise, we are on the same level as Bucharest. The situation is “lucky” only in Budapest, since in Bekes County, where average wage is the lowest, people have to work 388 hours for the same iPhone.

But there are worse numbers as well: a person living in Kiev has to work 627 hours, ie 15 and half weeks, to buy an iPhone 6s.

based on the article of hir24.hu
translated by BA

Graph: www.ubs.com