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If You Have A Good, Fast Connection To The Internet—Like DSL Or Cable Modem—You Can Use Your Computer's Internet Connection To Make And Receive Telephone Calls For A Fraction Of What Your Local Phone Company Charges. Welcome To VoiceOverIP-Guide.com. This Site Is A Free Information Resource That Will Answer All Your Questions About VoIP. As
You Explore This Site, You'll Discover...
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Are There Any Hidden Charges With VoIP Technology? |
How Can VoIP Service Providers Offer Such Cheap Rates? |
Is The Sound Quality Good Enough For Everyday Use? |
Skype Vs. Vonage: The 30 Second VoIP Comparison! |
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Online Meetings & Training. Free VoIP And Host. Lower Than Wholesale Rates For Online Collaboration Services.
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Get the most out of your VoIP provider
Author: Hamesh Brown
Features and pricing are the two prime considerations in
selecting your VoIP provider and deriving the maximum benefit
from the product. With most VoIP users, all the features
available in a particular product will rarely if ever be used.
All leading service providers promise a range of features that
look impressive as a marketing strategy, but often do not
deliver as practical options. "Features" do not always translate
as "benefits." Pricing is also a relative factor and is linked
to "quality" in the long run. Let us look closely at the
packages offered by three market leaders of today: Skype, Lingo,
and Vonage.
Skype has three basic usages: a PC-to-PC call, which is free
voice communication between two computer users across the world
with an Internet broadband connection; a paid SkypeOut voice
call from a Skype user to a landline/mobile phone; and a paid
SkypeIn call from a landline/mobile phone to a Skype user. For a
home requirement of chatting with family and friends, the Skype
PC-to-PC free call delivers on most promises made on the
official Skype website, including voice quality. If you are not
against being "wired" to your computer with your multimedia
speakers and headphone, this free offer is the best option in
this category.
However, if your requirement is for a full-scale voice service
that caters to PC-to-telephone and telephone-to-PC services, you
need to step up to the paid categories. SkypeOut offers a flat
global rate of € 0.017 per minute for some of the most popular
destinations worldwide, and has specific rates for other
destinations. SkypeIn, which is still in Beta, makes it possible
for your family, friends, and business acquaintances to reach
you from a landline by dialing a number assigned to you. SkypeIn
charges are independent of your location; if you are assigned a
Chicago number but are currently in Japan, the party making the
call only pays for a call to Chicago. If you buy a Skype
number--an annual subscription will cost you € 30 and a
quarterly subscription comes at € 10--you also get Free Skype
Voicemail bundled in the package.
Skype's cost plans are uncomplicated, and making a choice is
relatively simple. Compare this with Lingo's Home, Office, and
International plans, and the corresponding plans from Vonage:
From this analysis, Lingo emerges as the service that will save
you more on your telephone bill. However, to get more out of
your VoIP, you need to look at the international pricing because
that's where VoIP scores over a traditional connection. If you
make frequent international calls to Asia, you can take
advantage of Lingo's Asia package. Lingo's international rates
to individual countries are also lower than those of Vonage, but
higher than Skype. Here is a comparison of the rates for three
destinations:
Skype has the lowest call rates, but is limited in features. At
the other end of the spectrum is Vonage, which offers the most
consistent call quality and delivers on features, but is heavier
on your pocket. Although it loses out on voice quality, Lingo
has the features to match Vonage.
There are a few other features mentioned by both Lingo and
Vonage--such as Anonymous Call Rejection and Do Not Disturb in
Lingo, and Click-2-Call and Call Hunt in Vonage--but these are
more in the way of cosmetic embellishments than utility tools.
The features are many, the utility diverse. To get the most out
of your VoIP provider, you need to place the key factors of
pricing and features at both ends of a see-saw, and weigh them
with the cornerstone of quality--that will position you
enticingly in making the right choice and getting the maximum
out of your service provider.
About the author:
Hamesh Brown enjoys writing about VoIP. For more information,
see this comparison of Lingo, Skype and Vonage.
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A Quick Note
From The Publisher...
If you like the article above, you may be
interested in the following article which is also related to VoIP...
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Questions And Answers On VoIP Phone Service |
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What is VoIP phone service?
VoIP phone services let you replace your traditional landline phone with one that connects over the Internet. Today, your phone works on what is called the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN), a private network that reaches into your home through the standard phone jacks in the wall.
With VoIP services, your phone connects to the Internet over your cable or DSL modem. To do this, VoIP service providers bundle a small device, called a telephony adapter that plugs into the broadband modem and translates the electrical pulses from your phone into IP packets that travel over the Internet. The way you use your phone is the same, even though the network underneath changes.
What makes it so popular?
What made VoIp phone service gain so much attention is MONEY. Internet telephony is cheap. A local and long distance dialling package can cost as little as $19.95 a month. You won't find any mainstream, traditional... |
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