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What VoIP Is Actually Good For

gManZboy writes "One of the things that's bothered me about VoIP is that other than so-so quality phone service at a cheap price, what's the big deal? I mean so you can now deliver voice mail into e-mail because it's all IP packets, does that mean I should ditch my telecom investment. Well in part 3 of Queue's special report on VoIP (here's part 1, part 2) two authors from Bell Labs help explain actually useful things you might do. Now I get it."

16 of 288 comments (clear)

  1. VoIP isn't so easy... by LostCluster · · Score: 3, Informative

    I had a rather frustrating experience with the Net2Phone Voiceline product. Simply put, no matter how I tried to install it, it wouldn't give the green "provisioned" light or a dial tone.

    Their tech support was less than useless at telling me what was wrong... they just processed the return instead.

  2. VOIP is actually very good for phone calls... by loveisafist · · Score: 5, Informative

    Having used Vonage for several months I can say I am very pleased with their service and the quality of the calls. Before Vonage my only phone was a SprintPCS phone. When I got Vonage and called family/friends to tell them about a new number most of them commented how much clearer it was compared to the PCS phone I usually call them on.

    The only time I have had a 'problem' was when I was downloading some files on bittorrent AND playing FFXI Online and received a phone call. There was a slight echo audible on my end.

    I have actually convinced my father and two friends to ditch the local phone company and get VOIP. They are also very pleased with the service and money they have saved, which equals free months of phone service for me! ;)

  3. VoIP is great! by swimfastom · · Score: 4, Informative

    -"so-so quality"

    This is simply not true. Voice packets are given the highest priority across the network. If a voice packet does not make it to the destination, it is not resent. If the proper investment is made (you need newer switches and equipment) and the configuration is correct, it really does work great. I think it is ideal for an office with 30 people, especially if it is in a rural area where you may be paying a lot for a frame relay circuit or other connection. This setup can be done using Avaya VoIP phones in just a few hours and is very reliable!!

    --
    http://tomgould.com/
    1. Re:VoIP is great! by shrinkboy · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yes, voice packets are given priority on the network IF your ISP has DQoS implemented and enabled. This is not assumed or standard on any networks I'm familiar with, and you'd be foolish to assume ISPs rushing out to benefit third-party VoIP companies when there's a push to roll out ISP-branded VoIP... Anyway, without DQoS, it's all best-effort. As noted above, given sufficient bandwidth, you'll hadly ever get jitter unless you saturate the pipe with up/downloads that preclude sequential voice packets.

  4. VoIP was dropped at Barry University by IwannaCoke · · Score: 2, Informative

    I don't have first hand knowledge of the actual testing that was done because I just transferred here. However, I was told by one of my professors that the school just tried to implement a VoIP system, but the sound quality was terrible. In fact, they've already dropped it and gone back to the regular PBX / POTS system.

  5. Re:VOIP by SamBaughman · · Score: 4, Informative

    under peak hours, the lag has got to suck...

    Lag is an artifact of an poorly provisioned network. If you had end-to-end, trusted QoS, lag would never be noticable. Every important packet - voice, game, etc - would be delivered on time, and all the background "junk" - web, e-mail, BitTorrents - would fill the gaps between the important stuff that can't tolerate delay.

    The trouble with VoIP is the dependence on QoS, which most third parties can't provide. I've been tempted to try Speakeasy Voice, since they should be capable of setting good QoS for the VoIP service. But I still haven't checked pricing to see if it would actually save me money over traditional phone & DSL.

  6. Re:Why can't they make the quality higher? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't know how many phone calls you have ever made in your life, but my experiance tells me that they are definately NOT "... continuous constant bit rate data streams."

    I tend to talk a bit, listen a bit, talk, listen back and forth, etc. And of course it is spoken word so there are pauses and other irregularities when I am talking.

    Maybe there are resons it won't work, but yours is specious. Most likely the real problem will be getting all the switches/routers and other infrastructure, between you and the person you are talking to, to agree that your packets are indeed more important than all the current porn traffic and to expidite them.

  7. Quality does vary by rufey · · Score: 4, Informative
    Last week I played around with a VoIP box at my house just to see what kind of clarity it had, and, it wasn't nearly as good as my POTS line.

    However, I've had others swear by their VoIP. It seems to me that there is still just too many variables in the IP infrastructure for the experience of VoIP to be uniform. Not to mention the issues with power outages, 911 service, and the like.

    Another thing to note is that having voice mail sent to email is not a feature of VoIP per sey. We are currently implementing an email system that has this ability, given that you have the right voice mail equipment. While there are some features that VoIP does offer that can't be done with POTS and appropiate equipment, many of the features being touted as "VoIP only" features can be done with POTS.

    That said, about 5 years ago I was involved in a project to roll out VoIP in a new building (about 300 people, a call center of about 10 stations included). We used Cisco equipment and had two 24 channel trunks come in from POTS (one for local, one for long distance). Once it was up and running, the sound quality was nearly as good as POTS - we did have a slight echo once in a while, but other than that, it was great. We, of course, had complete control over the network, so doing QoS and stuff like that with voice packets was easy.

    VoIP, if done right, can be nearly as good as POTS in terms of sound quality, if not better. But given all the variables (phone, DSL/Cable router, your ISP, the POTS/Internet interface, etc), there are just too many places that can cause quality to suffer. And the problem becomes worse if you try and use a fax machine over a VoIP line, which doesn't have a high tolerance for packet delay.

  8. Re:VOIP Dosent still qualify the requirements in T by Ziggy66 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Power outages are a problem, but the consequences can be minimized. I currently use Vonage through my cable modem. I have my cable modem, router and Vonage box on a UPS. As long as I turn off my computer shortly after a power outage, the UPS can give me a few hours of phone usage, and I could get a stronger UPS and/or dedicate a UPS solely for the cable modem/router/vonage. Of course, if the outage is widespread and the cable service is also affected, then I won't have phone service. Vonage does have a function that automatically forwards your calls to a number that you set if you lose your connection. I have this set to my cell number. I can always use my car to charge my cell phone if necessary, so I shouldn't miss any calls unless cell towers are out, which is pretty rare.

  9. Re:In use? by BasharTeg · · Score: 3, Informative

    I mean so you can now deliver voice mail into e-mail because it's all IP packets, does that mean I should ditch my telecom investment?

    Yes! http://www.freedomvoice.com

  10. Infrastructure by csirac · · Score: 4, Informative

    We're replacing our knackered commander system (15 years old) with a bunch of VOIP phones (Snom 190). Also we're splitting our shop into two premises; using a WiFi link (with WEP/MAC filtering/IPSec/L2LTP etc for security).

    Using VOIP on our local LAN/WAN, we can share the same PSTN line pool (about 20 lines total) between both shops. If someone dials one shop but wants to speak to someone in the other, we can transfer that call. Very useful, not to mention the other possibilities with Asterisk (caller ID, call logging, stats, voicemail, extensions, music on hold, etc).

    As for actually using a VOIP carrier for outgoing call... no, not yet.

    We're setting up with Asterisk and Digium TDM400 cards with FXO modules.

    Standard x86 servers, Linux, Asterisk, Digium and Snom phones add up to a LOT less than the integrated turnkey solution we were looking to get from Siemens.

  11. Re:What VoIP can do that POTS can't: by ilovelinux · · Score: 2, Informative

    actually, (speaking as a telco employee) you can encrypt conversations over POTS with the proper hardware.

    (and have been able to for some time)

    What will be nice about VOIP is now you can encrypt your calls through cheap or free software, negating the need to buy specialised crypto hardware.

  12. Re:In use? by ergo98 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Many telcos are using VoIP in parallel with their PSTN backbones, and this is ok - most users don't even notice this behind the scenes VoIP application.

    It has been decades since phone companies actually switched a dedicated piece of copper for a voice call - they long ago realized that they could digitize the call and multiplex the packets over a high speed connection (digitizing at 64Kbps for a voice call, which is why all of the telecom standards such as DS0, DS1, DS3, and so on, are multiples of 64 - it's the number of uncompressed phone calls that the line can handle). What you may be referring to is the fact that up until recently most telcos ran the voice network on somewhat proprietary protocols and network infrastructures (i.e. ATM), but because of the cost benefit of IP many of them have switched to IP for their data networks, allowing them to use the same networks for data as well (although they QOS their own voice traffic so data never preempts a voice call).

  13. No, you can't by r6144 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Speech coding techniques used in VoIP are well tuned to human speech, for which it may still have poorer quality than ordinary phone lines in terms of signal-to-noise ratio, but sounds about the same quality to the human ear. When a modulated signal is fed into a speech coder, you get way poorer SNR than a telephone line, so the transfer rate you can achieve is generally much lower than the 33.6kbps achievable on a phone line, and definitely much less than the size of all these VoIP packets generated, so there is no point anyway.

  14. Pocket PC by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Since there is skype for pocket pc it makes any pocket PC into a mobile phone.

    What's more it is only useful when you are making outgoing calls or expecting an incomming one so there is not that annoying incoming cell phone buzz.

    People will switch entirely to IP telephony and it will be free eventually, the hardware to implement it will become powerful enough.

    What's bogging it down? No standards. Same as Webcams there simply is no way to get everyone onto one system except to get them to abandon their old system, something the telephone network never had to deal with.

  15. Re:We're doing it by tenshun · · Score: 3, Informative

    I would like to recommend this guide/tutorial http://www.automated.it/guidetoasterisk.htm#_Toc49 248757 They also got an iso that you can run without isntalling any software, although you need an usb memory for configs.