You Don't Know Jack about VoIP
gManZboy writes "Phil Sherburne and Cary Fitzgerald, two senior technologists over at Cisco, have written an in-depth overview of VoIP for developers and the like (not for everyone who's ever used a phone). Like Queue's earlier You Don't Know Jack about Disks, this article covers the history, the basic technologies, how they work, and where they're headed. If you found the blog post yesterday lacking, check this one out."
here you go
Trolling is a art,
voip will take over. Voice can be transmitted at such a low bandwidth, and all the cost to make a connection anywhere in the world is the cost of your ISP. I think they have them, but you need to have some sort of program always listening on a port from your IP, and transfer incoming calls to a usb connected phone that rings. Then you'd have all sorts of spam bots calling everyone's IP, so you'd have a list of approved incoming IP's or a numerical code that allows your call.
I know I'm going to be modded up on this
Before you waste time trying to get VoIP (or paying for VoIP from a provider) going it is worth testing your connection to see if it can support VoIP calls at a reasonable quality. You might want to test your line at various times during the day... I get crappier calls in the evening.
Anyway, http://testyourvoip.com/ provides a decent free testing serice just using a web browser.
-ben
This is a great statement to read while eating some jumbo shrimp.
If you're in the market for a VOIP service, Geekbooks did a pretty decent comparison of different services. Does anyone have any other links?
Your comment sounds pretty interesting, since you seem to know what you want, but apparently haven't looked anywhere other than Cisco.
Avaya's IP telephony products provide your encryption, Cell+Wifi with auto switch over, and my favorite, all the servers run GNU/Linux! No video phones yet.
I hear they're really expensive, but I really don't have any clue as to that, I just fix the stuff.
If thou see a fair woman pay court to her, for thus thou wilt obtain love
Yeah, Primus VIOP is only $20 /m when whith Telus it's at leas $30 /m for basic service. Plus you can have a extra line for $4 extra that you can place anywhere in Canada. So even though I live in Edmonton I could have a local number in Toronto that I could make local calls to there from. Also people could call me on that line locally and it would ring here in E-town.
--- to swing on the spiral...
and all the cost to make a connection anywhere in the world is the cost of your ISP
Unless you're one of the unlucky who has to use a DSL provider which requires you to pay for a landline to get said DSL service. Then you're stuck in a bit of a pickle. Hopefully that will change, I seem to remember hearing about laws regarding that problem.
Internationally, though, voice is still a cash cow. That may last a while longer.
Voice over IP is more of an advantage for companies with elaborate internal telecommunications infrastructures. The VoIP gear is cheaper.