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The Ying and Yang of VoIP
#1 - 0--kishan-- The Ying and Yang of VoIP--2006-04-29 23:15:59
# As more and more consumers learn about Voice over Internet Protocol
phone services, they are trying to find a definitive answer to one
burning question: Is this thing reliable enough to replace the Plain
Old Telephone Service (POTS) they grew up with and have built their
lives around?
There are, in fact, a great many positive reasons to switch from POTS to VoIP:
-
1. It's cheaper. Way cheaper. From about $9.95 for the most basic
service (still far better than POTS) to $39.95 for residential;
business plans usually run from $49.95-to-$99.95 and include a separate
fax number.
2. The free VoIP "modem" is shipped to you in 5 to 10 days; buy it
at a store for same-day service and the VoIP firm will reimburse or
credit it against your bill.
3. "Extra" services widely standard: VoiceMail, Caller ID, Call
Waiting, 3-Way Conferencing, Call Forward, Repeat Dialing, Call Block,
unlimited calling (local and LD) - in short, virtually every option
ever offered - for an additional fee - by any POTS company.
4. No charge for incoming calls from anywhere, unlike US cellular
providers; same for outgoing "local" calls (depending on plan; some use
a cellular-style monthly minutes package).
5. With VoIP, "local" in North America almost always includes both
the US and Canada; some also include Western Europe, parts of Asia and
parts of Latin America. For those countries not included free,
international plans are available for far less than standard LD
companies. Or you can make occasional calls without a plan for far
lower per-minute charges than most LD plans. This generally applies -
more or less in reverse - for VoIP services in Europe, Asia and
elsewhere, as well.
6. No computer needed, just plug a standard phone cable from the
VoIP box to your regular desktop phone or portable base station.
7. Activate every phone jack in the house - just plug the VoIP
modem into any existing wall jack, after first disconnecting your
house's internal phone wiring from the POTS world at the phone box
outside, probably on your front wall. This option generally is not
available to apartment dwellers. Sorry.
8. Virtual Phone Numbers: For a low price (usually about $5), you
can have a phone number in almost any area code, so friends or family
can dial a local number that rings on your phone. You can't use it for
outgoing calls because it isn't a "real" line.
9. Low-cost 800 Numbers: Want to make it free for a lot of callers
without bankrupting you? Most VoIP providers offer cheap 800 numbers -
free to the caller, fixed monthly rate for you (varies, but roughly $5
for the first 100 minutes each month, then 4.5-cents or so per minute
beyond that).
10. Find Me: Some include a system that, if you don't answer, will
call three or more other numbers you designate, in sequence or
simultaneously, then go to voicemail if you still don't answer.
11. And this is THE KICKER: Take your home or office "phone" with
you when you travel. Just pack the VoIP modem in your suitcase; on
arrival, plug it into any high-speed Internet connection (hotel room,
friend or relative's house, airport, whatever) and, bingo, you can
place and, more importantly, receive calls made to your regular phone
number. And that is true anywhere in the world (with charges based on
your home location). Go to Bora Bora and someone calling your home or
office number in Des Moines will never know you're not in Iowa when you
answer; call someone and your usual Caller ID shows.
For every ying, of course, there must be a yang - so now for the downside:
1. If you have a cable Internet connection, your downline is 2 to
10 times faster than your upline. As a result, you may hear the other
person clear as a bell and they may not hear you at all. This will lead
to them hanging up on you (they don't know you're there) or demanding
you "get off the speaker" or "hang up your cell and call me from a real
phone". And those are the polite ones.
The VoIP companies insist 256K up should be more than enough for a
clear signal; that does not appear to be the case in actual use. There
are ways to overcome this, if you get a knowledgeable VoIP support
tech.
2. High-speed connections vary in quality based on a host of
factors, from how many other users are sharing that cable line to how
far it is from the nearest DSL booster node. Which means day-to-day,
even call-to-call, VoIP quality is going to vary, as well - sometimes
to wild extremes.
3. When no one is speaking, there is a "dead" silence that makes
most people, accustomed to the slight "buzz" of a POTS signal, think
the connection has been broken. If you don't want to hear a constant
"are you still there?", explain this to everyone at the start of any
conversation.
4. If you try to "activate" a new credit card by calling via VoIP,
the computer at the other end may insist you are not calling from your
home phone. "Why?" is an as-yet unanswered question from the VoIP
providers.
5. Never, ever, let anyone put you on silent hold. If your VoIP
service doesn't hear something on that line for several minutes (how
many seems to vary), it may simply disconnect you, apparently on the
theory your phone is actually off the hook.
6. If your up-line signal is not strong enough, your call won't go
through, leading to an annoyingly frequent "Your call cannot be
completed at this time" recording.
7. Occasionally, your VoIP will just stop working. The fix varies
slightly by provider, but basically involves a lot of unplugging and
replugging of VoIP modem, router, cable/DSL connection, in a specific
sequence provided by the VoIP company.
8. Last - and by far worst: If your Internet connection goes down
for any reason, you have no phone service. Anyone depending entirely on
VoIP is strongly encouraged to keep a cellphone handy (keeping in mind
you can set VoIP up to automatically call your cell if you don't answer
the VoIP line).
Bottom line: Commercial VoIP is a real telephone service, unlike
computer-based "messengers" or even Skype (which clearly states it is
not telephony); marks against, include no video (yet) and a lot of bugs
yet to resolve. Still, at a savings of $30 to $100 a month, these
problems aren't so severe you can't learn to live with them. It's a
bigger issue for your office, but add a cellphone to the mix for
back-up and you may soon join the growing number of consumers who have
gone all-VoIP, with no intention of ever going to POTS again.
About Author
Author: Govindji Patel
Please visit my websites at:
http://www.myadstracker.com
http://www.hot-conference.com
http://www.thenicheonline.com
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