Truecaller has announced the global launch of its revamped version of its popular dial pad app Truedialer, available for free on Google Play.
With more than 100-million users, Truecaller offers its services in more than 200 countries around the globe and is now looking to entirely replace the native dial pad app on Android devices with significant improvements that make the experience faster, smarter, and more convenient.
The new Truedialer app includes a more intuitive app design, expanded search, and improved dual SIM support across more than 500 Android devices, allowing millions of handset customers to easily switch SIM cards in order to access the best rates for calling and data traffic.
Truedialer is a smartphone dialler that replaces your old, slow and boring dialler for Android with the quickest and most convenient way to find your contacts. The dialler uses a simple and easy to use numeric pad to help find numbers within your phonebook as well as outside of your phonebook with Truecaller integration.
The app also gives you instant access to relevant information about people you are about to call, and you don’t have to worry about all those unknown numbers in your call history as Truecaller will fill out all the missing information for you.
The problem with today’s native dial pad experience on Android devices is that it’s incredibly static and since Google does not currently provide a standardized process to integrate dual SIM features for third party apps, this requires more work on the part of consumers and manufacturers to add them in.
In the UK and US, dual SIM devices represent less than 5% of the population; however in large, emerging markets such as India, Indonesia, Nigeria, Russia, Thailand, and the Philippines, up to 40% of new Android users have multi-SIM devices. These percentages are representative of more than 2-billion people.
Truecaller is one of the few companies dedicated to providing dual SIM capabilities. On many Android devices on the market, you would have to go to your settings, find the right menu item, then switch the default SIM cards for calls or SMS, and then go back to the dialler to make the call or place a text. With Truedialer, you are simply one-click away from being able to switch SIM cards and make calls, saving time and money, with added convenience.
“Supporting dual SIM devices is not a matter of choice for us, it’s a central part of the phone experience for our users,” says Nami Zarringhalam, co-founder and chief strategy officer at Truecaller.
“With every new release, we are taking one step closer to making Truedialer a complete replacement of your default dialler and we look forward to expanding our relationships with OEMs and operators to meet the growing demands of our users globally.”
New Truedialer upgrades include:
* Increased Dual SIM support for more devices: Truedialer now supports more than 500 Dual SIM devices, so that millions of consumers can take advantage of the best rates for data and calls from different operators.
* Improved functionality and intuitive design: Advanced Swipe Right design allows you to add names to favourite contacts lists; Truedialer also shows what SIM card users call from within the app’s call log, and lets you make one-click calls from your dial pad, as well as ID unknown numbers in your call history.
* Integration with Truecaller for enhanced search and convenience: Truedialer is integrated with Truecaller’s database of more than 1,6-billion numbers for contacts. This gives you the ability to conduct manual name or number search and provides instant access to relevant information about people you are about to call (even those outside of your phone book), while letting you save the information quickly for later use.
New Truedialer is complimentary with the main Truecaller app, which is now adding more than 250 000 users every day. The company has also forged relationships with 6 of the top 10 OEMs in the world, and is looking to expand cross-market opportunities across Asia, Europe, and in India, where the company’s main app has been installed on approximately one-third of the country’s smartphones.