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"How incessant and great are the ills with which a prolonged old age is replete."

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Featured Voip Articles

Is My Home Ready for Voice over IP (VoIP) Telephony?
VoIP, or Voice over Internet Protocol, is finally reaching out to thousands of average homes to offer huge savings in telephone costs. Already popular with the corporate world, VoIP, sometimes called Internet Telephony, IP telephony, or Internet phone, ...

VoIP as Business Solution
VoIP as Business Solution VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) or widely known as Internet Telephony, have been publicly used for several years now. VoIP itself originated to be used by ARPANET as commercial realizations of the experimental Network Voice ...

Voip Service: Sign Up And Save
If you want to save money on your telephone service using the internet, you will need to sign up with a VOIP (Voice Over Internet Protocol) service provider. They will sell you the necessary equipment and assign you a number, which is used like a regular ...




An Honest Review of Vonage: A feature-rich, World-ready VoIP
 
With more players jumping into the already populated space of Voice over the Internet Protocol (VoIP), the perceptive user has that much more choice. Vonage is a leading player in this marketplace with over a million subscribers worldwide in a short lifespan of three years. However, there is a set of negatives too, so wait until you reach the end of this review before you decide to switch from your traditional landline service to Vonage telephony.

What is Vonage and how does it differ from your landline connection? For a start, you must have a broadband connection, preferably cable-based; a dial-up is no good. When you call Vonage customer service for a connection, Vonage sends you a tiny box, which you have to plug to your telephone and your cable modem or DSL. You are now set to start a Vonage conversation. With a Vonage connection, you have access to your telephone through your computer and the broadband connection. The other big difference from a traditional phone service is cost effectiveness; with a Vonage, you can cut your telephone bill significantly, and converse worldwide by buying local telephone numbers from Vonage.

Vonage offers a set of four monthly packages for all calls in the US, Canada, and Puerto Rico: a premium unlimited offer at US$24.99, a basic plan of 500 minutes at US$14.99, a small-business unlimited package at US$49.99, and a basic small-business offer of 1500 minutes at US$39.99. For calls from the US to other world destinations, there is a nominal per-minute rate applicable, which is well below what you would pay to your landline service provider. For example, for a minute's call to Mumbai (India), you need to pay only US$0.17; for a call to the UK, it is as low as US$0.04 per minute. The Vonage Website lists the charges applicable to each city on its network. Perhaps the best part of Vonage is that you can carry your US telephone number to any part of the world with broadband connectivity, and call the US at local call rates. For any reason, if you are dissatisfied with Vonage services, you can opt for the 14-day (or 30-day for some packages) money-back offer. This trial period is enough time to try out the excellent features that you get with Vonage:

* An unlisted telephone number

* Call waiting, callerID

* Call forwarding, 7-digit dialing (rather than area code +number used in many markets, including Lingo)

* An innovative voicemail feature

* Repeat dial

* Dynamic periodic feature updates



However, Vonage is not all positives. Its founding premise is a bit wobbly; your connection is afloat only as long as your broadband connection is. Any Internet outage and Vonage will cease to function. Call quality is also dependent on the speed of your broadband. Then there is the question of availability of a local number for your city; Vonage may not have your city listed, so you should confirm this with Vonage customer support before deciding on the service. Vonage is facing stern competition from AT&T and Verizon, and users have preferred the call quality of AT&T to that of Vonage. Vonage is also not the cheapest VoIP service around in the marketplace.

However, Vonage is a winner on features. If you have a dependable broadband connection, need to make frequent international calls, and travel to world destinations but need to stay in touch with the US, Vonage is for you.

About the author:

Hamesh Brown enjoys writing about VoIP. For more information, see this Vonage review.


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Voip News



Research and Markets: Scenario Forecasts for the Worldwide and Taiwanese VoIP Industries, 2009-2013 Out Now (Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance)
DUBLIN, Ireland----Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Scenario Forecasts for the Worldwide and Taiwanese VoIP Industries, 2009-2013" report to their offering.

Skype Lite Puts VoIP Calls on Android Phones [Android] (Lifehacker)
Skype Lite, a pared-down version of the popular, cheap VoIP calling software, is expected to be made available on Android-powered phones today (i.e. the T-Mobile G1). Skype Lite has been available...

Ooma rings in new year with Telo VoIP system (cnet.com.au)
Ooma officially unveiled its cordless VoIP phone at CES.

VoIP Rolls On: KIT Taps PhoenixSoft (BillingWorld)
As the economy makes for a tough operating climate, capital expenses are being scaled back. But that’s not stopping service providers from wanting to deploy VoIP and SIP services.

Looking Ahead to VoIP in 2009 (IT Management)
UC was certainly the telecom buzz word of 2008. Suddenly no self respecting VoIP company could be without some sort of a product offering that gave users access to a bunch of communications applications and modes in a single interface—or something along those lines.