Posted on Feb 6th, 2006 in
VoIP Reviews |
46 comments
Ooma is one of the leading VoIP providers which offer value for money service to the VoIP industry. This review will have a look at what this service offers to the internet phone service users and how it performs against the different evaluation criteria.
Voice Quality
Ooma is a very big name when it comes to providing internet phone services. Among many other things that Ooma is famous for, one of its strategic...
Posted on Feb 26th, 2006 in
VoIP Reviews |
37 comments
Vonage is a leading VoIP service provider with a large customer base. It offers many different exciting calling features through its various calling plans. Let us have a look at the different aspects of its service.
Voice Quality
Voice quality is something that customers really want to have at all costs from a VoIP service. A prime reason for customers to switch from the traditional phone system to an internet...
A small group operating an unlicensed VoIP relay in the Philippines has been arrested in raids conducted by the local police and anti-fraud staff of cellular operator Globe.
The group has been found to operate a facility that routs international calls into Globe telecom’s cellular network without passing licensed International Gateway Facilities. This is done through Voice-over-Internet Protocol, and hence the...
Posted on Feb 27th, 2006 in
Tech News,
VOIP |
0 comments
Skype is cool. You can call your friends for a fraction of the cost of regular telephone calls. You can even call for free, if you’re calling another computer with a Skype client and account. The same goes with other VoIP networks. You can call others for free as long as they’re on the same network as your own VoIP client. Skype-to-Skype, FWD-to-FWD, Google Talk to Google Talk, and Yahoo Messenger-to-Yahoo...
Posted on Feb 26th, 2006 in
Gadgets,
Tech News,
VOIP |
0 comments
Straight from the rumour mill: is it possible that the next cool Apple product is a VoIP iPod? Well, Apple isn’t known to announce its latest product offerings early—it chooses specific times in a year to make announcements, such as during MacWorld expos and Worldwide Developer Conferences. And its CEO Steve Jobs is known to give out vague statements about “fun” and “cool” products prior to...
Posted on Feb 25th, 2006 in
Tech News,
WiFi |
0 comments
UK mobile phone provider Orange is going the other way—it plans to offer fixed-line services soon. The company will be merging with internet provider Wanadoo to offer bundled services (both companies are owned by France Telecom). By April, Orange would have rolled out the first of its landlines.
The service, dubbed Orange Landline for Business, will run over the existing infrastructure of Cable & Wireless, and...
Posted on Feb 24th, 2006 in
Tech News,
VOIP |
0 comments
As with many other Internet applications, Voice-over-Internet Protocol is touted to be what would democratize the telecom industry. Where previously, only the big companies could set up the expensive and bulky telecommunications equipment, now innovative firms could establish their own “telephone” networks, which go through the Internet.
What’s great with this setup is that ultimately, the consumers would...
Posted on Feb 23rd, 2006 in
Tech News,
VOIP |
0 comments
A century ago, lovers across oceans and continents sent letters through the mail. It took weeks before the message is received—and several more weeks before the response arrives at the originating party’s end. A few decades ago, long distance telephone calls were the rage. You could talk to your loved one in an instant, but it wasn’t exactly cheap. So calls were usually limited to a few minutes. What kind of...
Posted on Feb 22nd, 2006 in
Tech News,
Telecom |
0 comments
Remember the SkypeOut hack we wrote about before? It basically involves calling a 1-800 toll-free number to connect to a directory service that then connects your after giving you the listed number. Well, it used to work on non-VoIP solutions. Hence, callers from other countries could also call the toll-free number at no cost from their landlines and mobile phones, as with other 1-800 numbers.
However, some telcos...
Posted on Feb 21st, 2006 in
VOIP,
VoIP Insights |
0 comments
VoIP provider Skype claims its security is foolproof, with its 256-bit AES encryption, stronger even than the industry standard 128-bit encryption used by banks for Automated Teller Machines. Other clients, such as Google’s GTalk are also touted to have adequate security to prevent eavesdropping. But is VoIP really secure against potential eavesdropping?
Well, in a nutshell, no. As easy as it is to claim that...