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Vonage Testing Mobile VoIP Service Routers

kamikaze-Tech writes "In a Vonage VoIP Forum article titled Vonage Testing Mobile VoIP Service Routers we learn that Vonage is doing customer trials involving a new Linksys Wi-Fi mobile service router. From the article comes the claim: "With the special router and handset, individual customers would be free to roam about their home or office, untethered from a modem or phone jack and without a connection to a laptop or desktop computer." Suggesting the new routers are geared for installation in Wi-Fi hot spots: "In theory, someone should be able to walk into a Wi-Fi-enabled cafe, fire up a laptop, log on to the Internet and start dialing. But that now requires technical know-how and configuration hassles that most consumers don't want to deal with. The new routers are designed to do most of the heavy lifting.""

91 comments

  1. Wow.... by trailerparkcassanova · · Score: 0, Troll

    I can do this with my cellphone without a hotspot. Why do I need this?

    1. Re:Wow.... by teksno · · Score: 1

      because you could get a smart phone with wifi and not use you minutes, and instead use you vonage account....

    2. Re:Wow.... by codexwriter · · Score: 1

      Exactly.

    3. Re:Wow.... by trailerparkcassanova · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why not take the money from the Vonage account and all the shit you need to buy to make it work and apply it to more cellphone minutes?

    4. Re:Wow.... by teksno · · Score: 1

      the trick is gonna be the network handoffs though.....im not sure if you could seamlessly intergrate wifi and what ever cellular net you on though (3g type or not...) i highly doubt it, and i have even bigger doubts that the cellular providars would allow such a thing. but i can dream

    5. Re:Wow.... by silentbozo · · Score: 1

      Because some of us would rather not reward greedy municipalities with oodles of tax money from taxing celphones. Plus, once you get it working with Vonage, you should be able to set up your own wi-fi based VOIP services, and get service for free in places where you control the infrastructure.

    6. Re:Wow.... by codexwriter · · Score: 1

      Piggyback your flatrate Vo/IP onto your flatrate IP over 3G, yes, you can always dream... *Chuckles* Then again, give it a few years...

    7. Re:Wow.... by stratjakt · · Score: 0

      And, instead, get nickel-and-dimed to death by every $5-dollar-per-hour hotspot out there. Maybe free wi-fi is everywhere where you live, but it's not where I am.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  2. I want to test it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want to test this out please.

  3. Wow! by PopeAlien · · Score: 4, Funny

    Imagine! Phones without wires!!

    We live in exciting times!

  4. So what happens... by DrEldarion · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Out in public? What happens when this becomes popular and there are a few people using up all the bandwidth at these hotspots? VoIP isn't exactly the least demanding application ever.

    If it becomes that popular, I can see places that offer free wireless access blocking VoIP access.

    1. Re:So what happens... by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

      VoIP isn't exactly the least demanding application ever.

      Yeah, I think ping is the least demanding application. 60-80kbps is not a lot of bandwidth.

    2. Re:So what happens... by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      Mind clueing me into an app that uses less than 13Kbps ( http://www.voip-info.org/wiki-Codecs )?

      It's very sensitive to latency and dropped packets, but it's not a bandwidth hog. In fact, I can fit at least 50 calls through a t1 using ulaw ( uncompressed voice codec ). Using gsm, that number jumps to over 200.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    3. Re:So what happens... by infernalC · · Score: 1

      I think VoIP takes about 384Kbps (someone correct me if I'm wrong) of synchronous bandwith.

      Linksys WiFi routers already do 54Mbps... what's the big deal? Your problem is going to be the pipe on the back end, not the WLAN. Most people have issues with VoIP because they are on sucky ADSL lines (and, of course, Ma Bell, Inc. is really anxious to help them out with that).

    4. Re:So what happens... by KingNaught · · Score: 1

      "I think VoIP takes about 384Kbps (someone correct me if I'm wrong) of synchronous bandwith." Your wrong :) No Voip I know of takes up that much bandwidth. Even at its highest bandwidth setting Vonange only uses about 90k. Vonage Bandwidth Settings. Normal Quality: 30k Higher Quality: 50k Highest Quality: 90k

    5. Re:So what happens... by youngerpants · · Score: 1
      Sorry, but wrong

      VoIP applications properly compressed using SIP should be about 8k (and remember this is just voice were talking about, not video streaming); 10% QoS on a standard 1024/512 DSL connection provides more than enough bandwidth for 6 conversations.

    6. Re:So what happens... by bluGill · · Score: 1

      Apparently you have never done

      man ping

      because if you had you would have seen the -f option. I can't think of anything that uses more outgoing bandwidth. Most targets limit their responses, but even still you can really chew up a network with ping.
    7. Re:So what happens... by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      Unfortunately, the solution is to charge money for usage. Free wireless access is a classic Tragedy of the Commons. Everyone and their mom will overload free hotspots with their VoIP and P2P warezing.. until they have to pay for what they use!

    8. Re:So what happens... by Vadim+the+Conqueror · · Score: 1

      My question is why people would bother with VoIP if they have ADSL...they have a phone line running into their house, that they're paying for...i've got a Vonage phone because i dont want to deal with Telus(Phone Company in Western Canada) so i've got cable net and my phone

    9. Re:So what happens... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two words: long distance.

    10. Re:So what happens... by cdrudge · · Score: 1

      Linksys WiFi routers already do 54Mbps Ok. Seriously. Have you ever REALLY gotten 54mbits/sec out of a 802.11g access point, of ANY brand?

      I didn't think so.

    11. Re:So what happens... by mla_anderson · · Score: 1

      Various reasons.

      1. Cost: I already have DSL, so that doesn't factor into cost, aside from the DSL Vonage is cheaper than the equivalent service from my local Telco. My local telco removes features and adds charges, Vonage adds features and lowers prices.

      2. Flexibility: I can spend an extended time with family and take my home phone with me.

      3. Second Line: While I have dropped most services off the copper line, I can still use it for the DTivo and fax without interrupting voice capability.

      --
      Sig is on vacation
    12. Re:So what happens... by 1bammer · · Score: 1

      Man has the industry missed the boat on this one so far--but not for much longer. Everyone is shooting at broadband for VOIP. But with all the demand, frequently all the broadband can muster is narrow band. KT-Tech can do Video and Voice Over IP (KT-V2OIP) starting at 4 kbps for 1-way (4 FPS QCIF)and 30 kbps for 2-way synchronous real-time (12-16 FPS at 80 kbps- concert quality audio for VOIP is around 60 kbps)...and they do it off a 85 KB software CODEC that also provides visibly superior images to MPEG-4 below 256 kbps in less than 0.01 seconds off a P-IV processor. Minimum CPU is a 200 MHz StrongARM- so grab your HP iPAQ, run down to your nearest hotspot and you could have a real-time VTC with your buds. Or you could fire up that 3G cell phone and do VTC anwhere. With this technology, why do you need an investment in specialized hardware anymore? So when that need goes away for dedicated hardware devices, what happens to those vesting their money in hardware solutions??

    13. Re:So what happens... by elgaard · · Score: 1

      Yeah, just as free toilets, free paper towels, free sugar, free reading of newspapers, etc at cafes are classic tragedies of the commons.
      Yet most cafes do not charge for use of toilets.
      Everyone and their mom might come to read the newspaper at the cafe. But is not a tradegy as long as they buy a cup of coffee.

      I.e. say a 1Mbit/s internet connections is $100/month. A VoIP call on average is 50Kbit/s, the store is open 300 hours/month. Then an hour of phoning cost the cafe 50*$100/300hours/1000 = 2 cents.

      I probably buy a cup of coffee for every 10 minutes I talk. I think I already pay for what I use.

    14. Re:So what happens... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm...a G729 compressed call is only an 8k payload per packet. G729 provides better than cell quality. People browsing the internet would use far more bandwidth.

  5. So what by PenguinBoyDave · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I have a cordless phone system at home (with Vonage) and I have a cell phone with global roaming. What do I get with this that I don't already have now that is simple and reliable?

    --
    I'm not a troll, but I play one on Slashdot.
    1. Re:So what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't get it. It's new therefore it exciting. You are living in the stone age man. You need to update your tech to hang with the cool kids.

    2. Re:So what by PenguinBoyDave · · Score: 1

      My kids tell me the same thing. Maybe I should listen :)

      --
      I'm not a troll, but I play one on Slashdot.
    3. Re:So what by MmmmJoel · · Score: 1

      An extra $40 in your wallet each month that you don't have to spend for those services.

    4. Re:So what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $40 for what? The cell service??? I dont think a wifi phone will replace a cell phone until there is wifi coverage like there is cellular coverage.

    5. Re:So what by radtea · · Score: 1

      What do I get with this that I don't already have now that is simple and reliable?

      You get shoddy business practices, poor customer service and unpaid (but promised) refunds. Welcome to Vonage!

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    6. Re:So what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Once they get all the kinks worked out, I'd *much* rather have a VOIP phone than a POTS phone.

      Having IP opens up all sorts of options. With POTS, you're kind of limited in what functionality you can offer. With VOIP, you've got IP, so the sky's the limit.

      This sounds like the first time I showed my dad a spreadsheet -- um, yeah, it does pretty much the same thing you do with a piece of paper and a calculator, but think of all the things it *will* be able to do Real Soon Now...

  6. I can make a VOIP call with my iPAQ & Skype by winkydink · · Score: 2, Funny

    Walk into hotspot.
    Acquire connection.
    Start Skype.
    Make call.

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    1. Re:I can make a VOIP call with my iPAQ & Skype by dtk13 · · Score: 1

      lose connection
      throw laptop across room
      order doughnut
      Using your girlfriend's cell phone: Priceless

    2. Re:I can make a VOIP call with my iPAQ & Skype by winkydink · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd just put it back in my pocket as my iPAQ is also my cell phone. The only value is with international calls as my domestic calling plan comes with nationwide LD included.

      However, I spend a lot of time on the phone to both Europe and Asia. Skype works and saves me a lot of $$$

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

  7. these are exciting times by clovercase · · Score: 2, Insightful

    right now you might pay for a phone line, a fax line, a cellphone, cable tv and internet.

    there are lots of convergences going on, but this is a big one. the day may be coming when you spend 1/4 or 1/3 of what you are paying now for the whole suite of pipes.

    1. Re:these are exciting times by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      No; the day is coming when you will pay one company one bill at around the same cost for all the functionality of those various services. And you will only have one company in your area providing those services.

    2. Re:these are exciting times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the day may be coming when you spend 1/4 or 1/3 of what you are paying now for the whole suite of pipes."

      Hah, yeah right! More like the day will be coming where we pay 1/4 to 1/3 more than what we're paying now for the convenience of all these bundled services.

      Hahahaha.. lower costs.. you were born yesterday, right?

  8. Hey! by beatdown · · Score: 0

    How about untethering yourself at the home or office by using a cordless phone? And why do you need a connection to a computer for VOIP? My service does not require a computer at all.

  9. Ok, but *why* ? by Matthew+Angel · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've already been testing a handset that lets me hop on an 802.11b network... Only thing it's missing is a web interface to permit me to click the "I Agree" button on some captive portals, and I've been told its "in the next release" (snicker). It's decent, but still B. I'm looking forward to the G version I can give my boss instead of his desk phone (since he's prone to wandering the office instead of sitting in a chair). I'd be curious to see how this does with consumers, though I think most of us are going to opt for a headset and softphone while at Starbucks, if we even bother using VoIP on a shared connection like that. ;-) Besides, with mobile carriers like MetroPCS (South FL and some of NC) offering no-limit use for $40, and carriers like Nextel offering unlimited incoming calls for $59, why would I wander around looking for a hotspot? I don't like coffee shops *that* much.

  10. Overloading hotspots? by sjbe · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I already use Vonage and think VOIP is great. Not quite "Mom-Easy" to setup but otherwise my complaints are few.

    That said,I'm still struggling to see the market for these mobile versions. How is a VOIP phone through a WiFi hotspot superior to my GSM cell phone? I've got both VOIP and cell service and I don't see the former replacing the latter for mobile communications. VOIP is cheaper sure, but WAY more limited for mobile communications. Much better suited for office work IMO. Even assuming these new devices work reasonably well, my DSL service gets overwhelmed pretty easily if I'm using Vonage and doing pretty much anything else at the same time. I can easily see two or three of these things being brought into a coffee shop and soaking up all the bandwidth.

    1. Re:Overloading hotspots? by glenrm · · Score: 1

      How is a VOIP phone through a WiFi hotspot superior to my GSM cell phone?
      I don't think that it will be superior at first, but it may be cheaper, a lot cheaper, maybe $4.99 extra a month, maybe free with vonage service. If so that will get people's attention. I have vonage it is great, but I like have my cell phone as a backup, if I had cheap bastard syndrom I could see getting the Vonage/WiFi as my only phone. I don't have CBS so having a cell phone makes a lot of sense to me.

    2. Re:Overloading hotspots? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying my mom is easy?

    3. Re:Overloading hotspots? by mellon · · Score: 1

      It's nice to be able to have an always-on phone that you can use to receive phone calls when you are at work or traveling. Why is it better than a cell phone? Lower power, and lower cost. Why is it worse? Hardly works anywhere at all. :'}

      Fortunately, usually I'm in a place where it does work, not in a place where it doesn't.

    4. Re:Overloading hotspots? by elgaard · · Score: 1

      > VOIP is cheaper sure

      A lot cheaper in some cases. Eg. international calls.

      I live in Denmark but use SIP phones when traveling. From the US phoning Denmark is $1.30 to $1.80 per minute (dependig on US roaming operator) with GSM and $0.02 with my SIP phone. Calling a US number is again $1.30 to $1.80 with GSM and $0.03 with SIP (A cent more because it is an internation call for a danish SIP-provider) That is unless I call another SIP number from my SIP phone in which case the call is free.

      Receiving calls in the US cost me ~$1 with GSM and is free with SIP.
      I have en extra US number with ipkall.com, so calling me is a lot cheaper with SIP than GSM both from Denmark and the US.

      And the US is not the worst place. I was in Vilnius in marts. It would have cost me $4/minute to call home.

      > Much better suited for office work IMO.

      Most of my friends and family have WiFi. Which means I can bring a SIP WiFi phone whenever I visit someone.

      >I can easily see two or three of these things being brought into a
      >coffee shop and soaking up all the bandwidth.

      The coffee shop would have a poor connection then.
      And most people do not phone all the time. E.g. the G729 codec use ca 30Kbit including RTP. A 1Mbit/1Mbit connection should handle 30 connections.

  11. Love those configuration hassles. . . by Sialagogue · · Score: 2, Funny

    "...requires technical know-how and configuration hassles that most consumers don't want to deal with."

    Yup, the 'technical know-how and configuration hassles' of many broadband connections are currently being 'dealt with' by the nice folks at the cable company, which has allowed many Slashdot readers to use their neighbor's Internet for the last year.

    So now we're a year away from being able to use their long distance service too, I guess.

    Vonage's tag line should be "Get your neighbor to sign up!"

    --
    The only acceptable defense of scientific results is to say that they were the product of the Scientific Method.
  12. solution already exists by SethJohnson · · Score: 3, Informative

    At the router level, you can prioritize packet types. It is no big deal to lower the VOip traffic to ensure web users maintain acceptable bandwidth. In most installations, people apply the reverse standard in prioritizing VOIP over http, but in the cafe scenario, I can see it going this way.

    Seth

  13. Sounds nice, but... by G27+Radio · · Score: 2, Interesting

    All the WiFi phones I've seen are ridiculously expensive. Maybe if the price on these types of phones comes down it will be worth it. Otherwise it's a better deal to get an ATA for your home/office and use a regular cordless phone--and all your phones can work off the ATA instead of just one phone.

    Being able to walk into a hotspot to use it would be nice I guess, but why not just use a cell phone for these occasions? The good thing is I could see this driving down the cost of WiFi phones.

  14. Dialup 56K access by trailerparkcassanova · · Score: 5, Funny

    Next Vonage will offer 56K dialup through wifi.

    1. Re:Dialup 56K access by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a funny thought, yeah, but VoIP providers already do offer fax services. I haven't tried a modem on mine but it could be useful for legacy devices.

    2. Re:Dialup 56K access by steve6534 · · Score: 1

      In my experience it's horribly slow because of dynamic latency and jitter.

    3. Re:Dialup 56K access by RandomJoe · · Score: 1

      This is one thing I'm a bit irritated with Vonage about. I asked if I could use a modem on my line, and they said yes. No mention of qualifiers. While my connection is rock solid (some people wonder if I'm still there when I'm listening, it's so quiet and clear) I have yet to get a modem to even sync up let alone connect and transfer data. This is on automation systems that only require 1200-9600 bps connections.

      I also noticed Vonage will give me a "fax line" for more money. They didn't mention that bit...

      Oh well, I just VPN into the office and use VNC to control the monitoring computer there that has a regular phone line! ;)

  15. Vonage Testing Mobile VoIP Service Routers by johnnyboy30 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What the heck do we need this for?? As a previous user commented - use a cell phone, use a cordless phone - this makes little or no sense to me. Technology for the sake of technology is not practical!

    1. Re:Vonage Testing Mobile VoIP Service Routers by centinall · · Score: 1

      now i only have ONE router, instead of wireless router that plugs into my vonage router.

    2. Re:Vonage Testing Mobile VoIP Service Routers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your right at this point it's not all that practical. However, when they get this thing to sign on to the cell network when wifi isn't available it may become more useful. This would allow the customer to have a one number solution instead of a home number and a cell number. Additionally, when you are connected by wifi you will not be using your cell minutes.

  16. Good thing it's easy to configure by Kid+Zero · · Score: 2, Informative

    Because you won't get Customer Service to help you at all. I tried for the final three months I had Vonage to get in touch with _anyone_ there about the service issues I was having, with zero luck. I finally went back to Ma Bell, who will at least listen and provides the services I need.

    I'll go back when they get some decent CS skills.

    1. Re:Good thing it's easy to configure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second this-- they simply don't respond to emails. Is anyone from Vonage listening? :) Their call center is off-shore as well, I believe.

      Their service works, but the linksys they provide sucks; its firmware is kinda iffy :) I had issues with using NAT with it.

      So, Vonage gets a good score for their VoIP working, but a bad score for customer service, indeed.

  17. Softphone by Crim-Prof · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I currently use my laptop and softphone from Vonage quite frequently at the local coffee house that offers free wi-fi and have tried to use it at panera bread which offers free WI-FI. However, I have been able to get it to work rather infrequently at Panera. At the local coffee house I open up my laptop, load the softphone, and then attach my headset. The question people typically ask is why not use your cell-phone.

    I can receive calls for free which would otherwise use my minutes, I can dial 1800 numbers which is what my university uses for its conference calls for free, and most importantly, it is the best way to have office hours when I am away from the university. I recently did my dissertation's first defense using the softphone and system to connect to all my committee members and did not have an issue. Recently, at a conference the second author of the work was unable to attend but had some new data that he wanted to present. I loaded the softphone and dialed into him and using the conference system called raindance and the conferences system, he was able to present the data without an issue.

    I see the progression of Vonage being very useful for those of us that for work have seen our laptops becoming more important then the air we breathe.

  18. A couple reasons by EvilStein · · Score: 2, Informative

    * No contracts
    * Your virtual phone numbers
    * Calling to Canada
    * Unlimited minutes. No worrying about going over minutes/roaming.

    Just a couple reasons. I have a bare-bones cell phone service through MetroPCS and my home phone through Vonage. For everything, I pay about $50/mo total. Something like this might me useful to me, as I'm often in a hotspot.

  19. I have MetroPCS.. by EvilStein · · Score: 1

    One reason I'd use it is in the event that I travelled outside of the MetroPCS service area. It's not that often that happens, but it certainly does occur, and I'm very likely to find a hotspot (Starbucks... even some of the middle-of-nowhere ones have T-Mobile now) or at least an open WAP to use for a few minutes.

  20. bigger hotspot problems by EvilStein · · Score: 1

    The turkeys that flip open their laptop and have Limewire, Bittorrent, Bearshare and Kazaa all launching and downloading cruft.

    p2p apps + hotspots = inconsiderate behaviour. :(

  21. Re:I'M AN OPEN PROXY, BAN ME! by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    Funny, this troll seems like it just happens to be ONtopic!

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  22. WiMax by clovercase · · Score: 4, Interesting

    while this might not be too practical right now, consider what happens when WiMax becomes available almost anywhere. no need for a separate internet and cellphone account - its integrated! Vonage seems to be planting the seeds so they are ready when wireless internet is available anwhere.

  23. That day should have already come by mollog · · Score: 1

    The day of lowered costs for phone, TV and Internet should have been here already. The holdup is that the various communications businesses bribe their congress-critters to stay in business.

    AT&T saw this trend and started buying cable TV, and cell phone businesses so that they could be the ones to provide this integrated communications services. Unfortunately, they underestimated the political power that would be used to slow this integration.

    Other countries surpass us in the quality of their services because businesses have to compete in those countries.

    Someday, the promise of cheap, widespread, and rich communications services will arrive.

    --
    Best regards.
  24. What is wrong with standard cordless phones? by JPriest · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Why not just use a wired MTA and a standard cordless phone? Would that not leave them "free to roam about their home or office"?

    People seem to believe 802.11 is required for a wireless home phone but that is not true. The real point behind using 802.11 for VoIP is so you can build the MTA into the phone and use it not just at home but roam from any home/buisness/hotel/coffee shop with wireless internet access.

    --
    Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    1. Re:What is wrong with standard cordless phones? by radish · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nothing's stopping you doing that at all, in fact that's exactly what I do with Vonage today, and have done for 6 months. A single base station hooked up to the Vonage box, and multiple handsets located throughout the house. Works very well indeed, highly recommended.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

  25. Mobility Upwards by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Mobile phones will really start to work for us when they can use any of the radio networks available, handing off seamlessly. UMA is the mobile telco's 3G coopt of WiFi. SCCAN is the WiFi coopt of 3G. And the IEEE's 802.11e makes WiFi itself suitable for heating up spots in the mobile convergence mix. There's even Bluetooth routes to global telephony. It'll take a few years to work at all, but we're looking at the ream form of the emerging mobile platform.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Mobility Upwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doh, lucky I live in Europe and can use my gsm phone seamlessly in all the european countries...

    2. Re:Mobility Upwards by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Does it roam to WiFi seamlessly? That's what we're talking about. BTW, when I planned a driving tour from Berlin through Athens a couple of years ago, I had to find different phones along the way, into which to swap my SIM card - renting prepaid ones was the way to go. Is that fixed yet?

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  26. what about VOIP over 3G data channel? by Ritz_Just_Ritz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm looking forward to the day where I can use my $30/month wireless phone w/3G service to connect to a VOIP gateway over the data channel and chat with my buddies overseas for some rational fee. As things stand now, you either need to use a phone card or allow your carrier to drive a VW microbus up your nether regions to make international calls.

    1. Re:what about VOIP over 3G data channel? by Daravon · · Score: 1

      http://usadatanet.com/ I use it instead of a normal long distance carrier. From what I can figure they route their calls over VOIP (they even offer a service to connect a normal phone to your broadband router and call anywhere for a flat monthly fee). If you just use the calling plan, there's only a certain maximum fee you pay. I know for the one I'm on, I talk as long as I like and it's a max of $1 for the New England area and $2 for the rest of the US. The international max rates are pretty nice as well.

      --
      I traded all my mod points for these magic beans.
  27. How are these routers different? by tedhiltonhead · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, this is supposed to allow Vonage users to use Wi-Fi handsets? I'm not clear what these routers do differently than any other router that supports SIP NAT traversal. The article mentions selling this to hotspot operators; what does this router offer an operator? Can somebody explain?

  28. One word: convergence by sysgeek01 · · Score: 1

    Many providers are looking to converge their separate networks into a single network that is cheaper to maintain. Mobile WiFi based phone service is just a step into that direction. Eventually, I see Cell providers switching to a pure IP based service using WiFi type standards. It's not here quiet yet, but it's coming. Has anybody looked into Flarion? (http://www.flarion.com/ I believe a system like this could be a step into moving to a pure IP based system. A local cell carrier has been beta testing flarion in my area for a while and some of the cities cop cars have had flarion systems implemented into them so that they can get more detailed information quickly to their cars. VoIP may not be as stable or as secure as a typical digital cell service, but the day is coming when VoIP technology will over take the typeical cell service because it's cheaper.

  29. Reliable service? by fdrake76 · · Score: 1

    Here is another reason to consider this as dubious at best. I don't know Vonage's upstream requirements but Broadvoice prefers 150 kb/s upstream for their service. You have virtually no guantee that these free wi-fi hot spots have that available. Meanwhile, your cellphone service in that area (for better or for worse) will be rather predictable.

  30. YES!!!!! by ToasterofDOOM · · Score: 1

    It's like, meta-wardriving!!!

    --
    I am Spartacus
  31. Mobile VoIP is useful because... by pyramis · · Score: 1

    In the future, the global voice network will merge with the global data network and we'll have realtime, always-on, p2p voice communications. Think instant messenger in your cell phone earbud. You'll be able to ask your buddy in Thailand a question as easily as asking the guy in the next cube over.

    Talk about voices in the head...

  32. "Mobile" is a misnomer. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    When I hear "mobile", I think of traveling inside a vehicle. 802.11(*) wireless works like crap when you're trying it from a vehicle moving greater than about 20-30 MPH. Every test I' ve done, we've had to pull over and stop to get the damn thing to lock onto the signal again, and the connection will drop out as soon as we start driving again.

    Other wardrivers might say, "I can find dozens of hot & open access points while driving around". Yep, airsnort can certainly find them ok while moving, but you sure can't *use* them worth crap until you stabilize your receiving platform... i.e by pulling over to the side of the road.

    What we really need is true *MOBILE* wireless networking that can keep the bitrate up and constantly flowing to moving vehicles at full highway speeds.

    Meshed 802.11 almost held promise, but I think there's just too much moving chunks of metal reflecting the microwave freqs around when in a road environment. I think a lower freq spectrum, prolly closer to 700-800 MHz would be much more viable for mobile use.

  33. Not to nitpick, but..... by billcopc · · Score: 1

    Vonage is a beautiful thing and "it just works". We use them at work and it's great.

    I just don't understand what this "new development" offers more than a conventional VoIP router and cordless phone ?

    The concept of Hotspot VoIP is kind of dumb in my view. The magic of Vonage is that you just plug a regular phone into an IP router and it works out of the box. I don't see how they could do that in a wireless environment and I sure as hell don't feel like buying a hotspot-only vonage cell phone when my existing cell phone is relatively cheap and works anywhere.

    Wireless Vonage is a pipe dream. The whole backbone of VoIP is of using the cheap, plentiful internet connectivity instead of nazified telco loops. Wireless VoIP would entail using some sort of GSM internet access which is a zillion times more expensive than voice.

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com