Slashdot Mirror


PhoneGaim Brings Phone Calling To IM Users

An anonymous reader writes "Eweek has an article on how PhoneGaim integrates IM and phone into one program making it possible for AOL/ICQ, MSN and Yahoo users to call each other, landlines and cellphones. It talks about how it could be a Skype-killer since it's based on open standard SIP and comes with free PSTN calling (5 minutes per day), free voicemail via email, and even supports incoming phone calls from PSTN. It's out first for desktop Linux (maybe the start of a new trend?) but it's open source so expect a MSWin version shortly from Gaim team."

42 of 158 comments (clear)

  1. BT/Yahoo in UK announced service in UK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    This week BT/Yahoo announced an upgraded yahoo messenger product that does the same, however pc->phone connects are billed to users landline account. PC->PC are free, International charged at destination countries local rates.

    1. Re:BT/Yahoo in UK announced service in UK by roror · · Score: 3, Informative

      but, they use the public internet. So, basically the user is paying the higher landline cost for the lower phone-over-public-internet quality.

  2. Sounds interesting by QangMartoq · · Score: 4, Interesting
    But I wonder - Is the 2.28 cents per minute rate (domestic US only, others higher) a good deal?

    What about the call quality?

    A quick look at the site shows the adapter to be about $90 - which, I think, is required to be able to use a normal telephone. That kind of upfront cot is not going to win over customers!

    1. Re:Sounds interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      A more detailed look (or a look at all, actually) will reveal that they have a SIP handset available for $19.95 US via sipphone.com.

    2. Re:Sounds interesting by SquadBoy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For a hardware VOIP solution how is 2.99 cents a minute better than say 0.00 cents a minute?

      http://www.packet8.net

      http://www.vonage.com

      --

      Cypherpunks: Civil Liberty Through Complex Mathematics. Those who live by the sword die by the arrow.
  3. O. S. X! O. S. X! by numbski · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Okay, okay. I'm excited.

    Here's the deal. The house I just bought is POTS. I've long wanted a way to hook a box up between my NID and all the phones in my house, and have that box intercept all calls, and run it through a 'spam' filter if you will. Be able to filter calls by wildcard (block all calls from area code 803, or an exact number, or numbers without caller ID) and give a generic message to the caller, heck even pick up the call and hang up immediately. If it passes the filters, ring the house phones.

    I know that this gets off-topic, but it seems to me that this is a step in the right direction (possibly) of accomplishing what I want without having to go buy IP phones for my house.

    --

    Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

  4. Re:That's nice... by memco · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It doesn't strike me as something that will be very big. Especially with a whopping 5 free minutes a day; what kind of conversation can you possibly have in five minutes that couldn't just be done over IM? I've used iChat's VOIP, but only once in a blue moon; frankly I only use it because someone calls me. I wouldn't think it's worth the $20 phone or $5 a month fee for a number. It's simply not usefull enough to coulgh up the dough for extra hardware or services. It'll most likeley end up being one of those things you show people just to say "hey, look what I can do", and then never use it again.

    --
    Get me a meat pie floater!
  5. Vonage & SIP? by Duwke · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does vonage use SIP? I would think not, but I noticed that both use the same softphone
    http://www.vonage.com/features.php?feature=softpho ne
    http://sipphone.com/softphone/

    Don't tell me Xten thought ahead and created a transport abstraction so that either could be used... cause I want to use GAIM with my vonage account!

    1. Re:Vonage & SIP? by silas_moeckel · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes you can actualy. Vonage is a standards based VoIP service you just need to know where to point your VoIP endpoint to register put in the password (Hard to get unless it's a softphone account) I currently run Vonage through an Asterix PBX it's not that hard to get working. Hit up google for the particulars.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
  6. If only.... by Iphtashu+Fitz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...they supported IM through SIP then I might make use of this product. I have no desire to place phone calls through my computer, especially if I have a limited number of minutes or have to buy extra hardware or the cost is going to be more than using the old-fashioned phone sitting on my desk right next to my computer. What I REALLY could use is a linux IM client that supports SIP. My company uses MS products for all it's IT, but everybody in my group runs linux desktops. Now that they've rolled out a corporate IM solution based on MS products we're effectively SOL unless/until somebody develops a SIP IM client for linux... I'd find a linux SIP IM client infinitely more useful than a linux SIP phone.

    1. Re:If only.... by wfberg · · Score: 4, Informative

      unless/until somebody develops a SIP IM client for linux...

      Does a java client cut it?

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    2. Re:If only.... by chefmonkey · · Score: 4, Interesting

      We're working on it, but it'll probably be a bit of time before we can dig up the time to add all the necessary features. (n.b. this is still alpha code. I'm pointing it out in case anyone wants to help develop).

  7. To those wondering.. by wfberg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The service (with 5 minutes free etc.) used is SIPPhone, the company that was started by the Lindows guy.

    The 5 minutes for free can only be gotten by using phonegaim ON lindows, buying a SIPPhone device, or by buying $20 of SIPPhone minutes. Not actually free, then, just included with the cost of your purchase.

    Note that you can only call people if you're BOTH using phonegaim. You could just exchange (S)IP numbers and use any normal SIP client for the same effect. Nothing to see here. There are already dozens of free SIP clients.

    Note that skype, while a cooky closed-source, non-standard product, does have good support for using it behind NAT, which is harder with SIP. (Personally, I say, give me the IPv6 already).

    --
    SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    1. Re:To those wondering.. by chill · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Note that you can only call people if you're BOTH using phonegaim. You could just exchange (S)IP numbers and use any normal SIP client for the same effect. Nothing to see here. There are already dozens of free SIP clients.


      Really? I was under the impression that you could attach a SIP number to a Buddy and call them as long as they had SIP capability. Like...MSN Messenger.

      While there may already be dozens of free SIP clients, name one on Linux that integrates IM (presence) with SIP.

      STUN "Simple Traversal of UDP through NAT" was designed to go with SIP and deal with NAT. It works pretty flawlessly.

      -Charles

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  8. Re:Sweet! by Ari_Haviv · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it could be a killer open source app but how can it be a killer app for linux if it will be for Windows?

    But thinking in terms of "killer" for one platform is the old way of thinking. Open source itself is the killer feature for an app no matter what platform it's on. But if the platform itself is open source-that's a 2fer.

    --
    Join Team Mozilla #38050 Folding@home
  9. Re:O. S. X! O. S. X! by silas_moeckel · · Score: 4, Informative

    You can do this now. Asterix makes a good PBX you just and outward and inward facing physical lines as you desire more inside extensiuons (Groups of phones) and outside lines. The cards are a few hundred and it needs a modest PC to run everything. Pretty much you can add any type of extension be it VoIP or POTS and any type of outside line be it VoIP POTS ISDN or a PRI. You can implment outgoing dial plans so that long distance is autmoticaly routed to the VoIP with fallback to land lines etc etc etc. Right now I run my house with these (it helps that I baught a small pile of dirt cheap Diamond USB attached inside POTS lines) every phone is it's own extension and I have POTS and VoIP external lines.

    --
    No sir I dont like it.
  10. Re:That's nice... by argent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's getting hard to find a high-end cellphone WITHOUT a camera now.

  11. Re:What I would like to see by blastedtokyo · · Score: 3, Informative
    It exists...it's called FWD

    For vonage the instructions are here while for Packet8 it's here.

  12. Re:missing the point by LuYu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, if your friend or parent is in, say, India, will you just call them? I would say this is a very useful tool for travellers of any kind. Even college students who go out of state should find this useful.

    The reason the two go together is cause it is about communication, and IM servers provide an easy way to find people (easy as compared to memorizing phone numbers). Also, whether or not you are using voice, you still need text messaging to send links and files because communication is no longer limited to speech.

    By the way, file sharing already works (for MSN, at least). The only thing that is missing (from what most people are used to with p2p) is a search tool and persistent shared directories. Right now direct transfers involve actively sending files.

    --
    All data is speech. All speech is Free.
  13. Re:phoneGaim by theefer · · Score: 2, Informative

    You misread the site indeed. It works everywhere, just grab the source and compile it. Or wait for someone to provide RPMs/DEBs/ebuilds.

    PhoneGaim is Free Software (GPL).

    --
    theefer
  14. Re:Sweet! by hackel · · Score: 2, Informative

    If it indeed uses SIP, then it will work (eventually), that's the whole point of an open standard.

  15. Re:missing the point by letxa2000 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    What I'd really like (and it may already exist, but I haven't been able to find it) is a totally hardware, totally internal VoIP solution.

    That is... We have a main office and I'm in a remote location (another country). I want to be able to buy a piece of hardware I can just connect to my remote location's LAN (which is connected to the Internet) and buy a piece of hardware that connects to the LAN at my main office. The hardware at my remote location would just connect to a normal phone while the hardware at my main office would just connect to a phone line (or extension of a PBX). When the line/extension rings, it goes over the Internet and rings my phone at my remote location. If I want to make a call, I pick up my phone and I'm given a dial-tone from my main office.

    But what I want is a pure hardware solution. I want to pay for the hardware and be done with it. There should be no monthly fee since once I have the hardware I'm not using anyone elses resources.

    Likewise, I should be able to make free phone calls to others that use the same hardware as long as my phone knows their IP address (or there is a free/cheap service that maps their number to their current dynamic IP address).

    Is there something like this? In theory the hadware ought to be dirt cheap since all it really would require is a network card, an ADC/DAC, and a microcontroller to perform the logic. Such a device could probably be built for less than $30, so it ought to be availble to the public for less than $100 for each location.

  16. Ripped off Icon from iChatAV by xirtam_work · · Score: 2, Informative

    is it just me, or is the icon for PhoneGaim just a complete rip-off of the iChat AV icon on Mac OS X.

    I can't get excited about this PhoneGaim as I already use a SIP phone client as well as iChat AV.

    I expect Apple to add voicemail in the next version anyway. It's been touted in many of the forums I read already.

    1. Re:Ripped off Icon from iChatAV by xirtam_work · · Score: 2, Informative

      actaully, you can own an icon. It had to be designed.
      just because something is open source doesn't automatically make it righteous.

      remember, this has come from a company who have tried in the past to rip off apple's iphoto virtually button for button before hand.

      I can tell you stand by your opinions 100% by the fact that you've posted using your slashdot account Mr Coward ;-)

  17. Re:phoneGaim by gnalle · · Score: 2, Interesting
    From the faq : All code changes are being provided to the Gaim project and will hopefully be merged into the main Gaim distribution.

    However I wonder if gaim-vv will end up replacing phonegaim.

  18. it looks like gaim-vv by bferrell · · Score: 5, Informative

    with terminating POTS service hung on the back of it.

    see http://gaim-vv.sourceforge.net/

  19. Open Source by samhalliday · · Score: 3, Informative

    in fact... its more than just open source. its *free software8 and is distributed under the GPL. sweet! (remember... not all "open source" software is free, it simply means the source code is viewable; like java.)

  20. It appears that the source code is broken. by Da+w00t · · Score: 2, Interesting
    There are two phonegaim specific files that are not in the latest tarball, off linspire.com *or* phonegaim.com.

    linphone.h, and osipua.h. During compiling:
    In file included from gtkblist.c:51:
    sipphone.h:3:26: linphonecore.h: No such file or directory
    sipphone.h:4:20: osipua.h: No such file or directory
    Hrm.. Lets see.... GPL software mods ... missing pieces of the mods... sound familiar? I'm not going to start hopping up and down like a crazed gully dwarf screaming "GPL VIOLATION!", but has anyone else successfully built phonegaim from source? I'm looking into starting to use SIP phone service (asterisk, vonage, sipphone.com), and this was one of the options I was looking at.
    --

    da w00t. mtfnpy?
  21. No credit to the Gaim team, in the slightest by SuperBanana · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As usual, Lindows seems to be cruisin' for a bruisin':

    PhoneGaim (pronounced "Phone Game") is an Open Source project started by Lindows, Inc.

    I believe that should read, "PhoneGaim is an open-source project, using open-source code from Gaim with SIP technology added by Lindows, Inc."

    Also, the main page is bullshit:

    Available immediately, and exclusively for Linspire

    Uh, try, "source is available on the downloads page", not "you must be running Linspire". Then again, they could have crippled it so badly that it will only compile on Linspire...

    1. Re:No credit to the Gaim team, in the slightest by magefile · · Score: 3, Informative

      The full quote is: "Available immediately. Exclusively for Linspire, PhoneGaim can be downloaded and installed with one-click," meaning that Linspire's exclusive "thing" is the 1-click installation. Whether it's really one click or not, and whether that'll actually be exclusive once RPMs come out, is another question. Misleading, but I think you misinterpreted it.

  22. gaim updates by tannhaus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My only problem with this would be the frequency you have to update gaim to keep yahoo and others working. If they're going to use gaim they should have some type of notification built in to notify you when a new version is available...AND KEEP IT UPDATED.

    It won't be so bad for Joe Blow if all of a sudden he can't connect to Yahoo but sees a new update is available. Then he installs the update and Yahoo works again. He's satisfied and doesn't think anything of it. The problem will be when these lindows users download this and can't connect to yahoo or one of the other services. Then they think gaim is crap...when in reality yahoo just broke things on purpose again.

    1. Re:gaim updates by Gleapsite · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So what if in Gaim a patching system was implimented, and the default option was to alert the user when patches for specific protocols were available. so Jow Blow downloads the latest of Gaim and get an alert saying "Yahoo has changed their protocol, we are currently working on fixing this, please bear with us" or something of that like. This way we inform the users whats going on, and we don't actually have to have a fix to alert them that its broken. AND we can place the blame where it belongs, right on Yahoo's doorstep. just a thought

      --
      face the world with eyes of fire.
  23. PBX hardware; no more by ipstacks · · Score: 2, Informative

    www.asterisk.org - I haven't looked to see is it has the ability to do the toll by-pass you are asking for, but I know a couple of Cisco routers can do it. Software PBX, analog/digital/VOIP phones mix and a toll by-pass link between the two sites with a dial plan should do it.

    --
    Which distro does Linus use?
  24. It would be better.. by pugdk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    if the gaim team would finish the support for normal IM's before throwing themselves into this kinda project.. I mean, I *still* can't get MSN to work using gaim... If I'm lucky I can connect but then I can't receive messages and if I try to write someone I will be disconnected immediately.. Please fix this before making a voice version :)

    1. Re:It would be better.. by ChipX86 · · Score: 2, Informative

      We didn't write this, despite Slashdot's very screwed-up information about all this.

      You're not the only person hitting that MSN bug, but it's something that not a lot of people (and no developer, as far as I know) has been able to hit. We're looking into it.

  25. Re:Nuts! by sveinungkv · · Score: 2, Informative

    You could do that by creating a Jabberaccont, adding AIM to it, and download a Jabberclient for the phone (it's a lot of them, try jabber.org)

    --
    Spelling/grammar nazis welcome (English is not my first language and I am trying to improve my spelling/grammar)
  26. Linspire, phonegaim by ites · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The reputation of Lindows/Spire is undeserved. They have always made the source code for their modifications to Linux packages freely available.

    Phonegaim was paid for by Linspire and they have made the source code available as required by the GPL. This was mentioned in one of Michael Robertson's emails a few days ago.

    You should stop speaking ill of people who do nothing wrong.

    --
    Sig for sale or rent. One previous user. Inquire within.
  27. Re:missing the point by malverian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Cisco produces hardware VoIP phones. When I was studying for my CCNA in highschool, we visited one of the Cisco headquarters and they told us to just go ahead and make a phonecall to anywhere out of the country.

    While that in itself isn't telling, the phones were set top units (no computer needed) that had an ethernet cable plugged into them.

    Slightly off topic, but may appeal to the geek in you. Their cameras and televisions, projectors, thermostats and lighting was controlled by hardware TCP/IP based units. Very neat stuff.

    --
    You're just mad because the voices in your head talk to me.
  28. a word from Gaim by L.Schierer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a gaim developer, I'm rather curious to know where this idea that we will be providing a win32 version of this fork has come from.

    1. Re:a word from Gaim by L.Schierer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      We have not as yet seen a patch from them, and I know from the brief glance we gave to the source when this came to our attention yesterday that if submitted as it currently exists, it would be unacceptable, as they have ignored some of the more basic design concepts in Gaim's source. So my question stands, I remain rather curious where this idea (on both their part and /.'s) comes from.

  29. Re:Sweet! by Curtman · · Score: 2, Informative

    Cooperative Linux is the first working free and open source method for optimally running Linux on Microsoft Windows natively. More generally, Cooperative Linux (short-named coLinux) is a port of the Linux kernel that allows it to run cooperatively alongside another operating system on a single machine.

  30. Waste of time and resources by ShadowRage · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This has to be one of the most useless apps I've seen.

    first, it only works for lindows, you can get the source, but without some serious issues (I had to hack my makefile, and no prevail)

    no documentation whatsoever, so you gotta guess the deps.

    you could go with gaim-vv rather than this. this is just a waste, it cant connect to any other sip networks except the one run by lindows, and it can only communicate with other phonegaim clients, and it costs money to call a landline, not to mention the rates high for VOIP.
    The last comment in the article should be edited out because the GAIM devels have zero involvement with this.

    just dont bother with this, it's overhyped, only reason it's getting media coverage is because a company is behind the new features. gaim-vv is much better IMHO.

    bottom line, phonegaim is a cruddy hack. dont bother with it.