This paper evaluates Tricaller, a mobile application enabling three-way voice calling over VoIP and cellular networks. We examine its user interface, call setup time, audio quality under varying bandwidth conditions, and privacy features. Results indicate that Tricaller offers low-latency connections (<150 ms) and end-to-end encryption, but usability declines with poor network handovers. Recommendations for improvement are provided.
At its core, Truecaller operates on a simple, elegant, yet terrifying premise: mutual assured visibility. When a user installs the app, they grant it permission to upload their entire contact list to Truecaller’s servers. tricaller app
Modern smartphones often have two SIMs (Work/Personal or Travel/Home). TriCaller intelligently manages both. You can set rules (e.g., "Work calls use SIM 1 data, personal calls use SIM 2") or let the app select the SIM with the strongest current signal. This paper evaluates Tricaller , a mobile application
Truecaller has created a new social norm: If you are not in my phone, you don't exist. It is now considered rude to call a stranger in Mumbai or São Paulo without a WhatsApp preview or a Truecaller-identified number. The app has shifted the burden of transparency from the caller to the callee. Truecaller has created a new social norm: If
One of the best features is the ability to "burn" or disable a number. If a specific line starts attracting too much spam or you are finished with a specific project, you can often delete the number and get a new one. This keeps your primary personal number private and secure.
In regions plagued by spam calls (telemarketers, scammers, political robots), the cost of a missed private call is higher than the cost of losing privacy. Users are willing to trade their contact book for a filter that separates "Mama" from "Spam Risk."