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Cringely Shows How to Get Free Cell Calls

SafariShane writes "In this week's pulpit, Bob describes how to properly use new software from a company called IPDrum. Basically, you use the free mobile-to-mobile feature of any major carrier to call a dedicated cell phone attached to your computer. That call is then connected to Skype, allowing you to make free cell calls just about anywhere. Just how long till someone does this on a large scale, by overselling the dedicated lines, and starts selling true unlimited cell plans?"

15 of 222 comments (clear)

  1. A new acronym? by bfizzle · · Score: 5, Funny

    Talk about a hack...

    Makes me wonder how much delay there is between talking and the other party listening with the cell to cell to skype to skype to cell to cell.

    We have a new acronym c2c2p2p2c2c

  2. And then? by daVinci1980 · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are already companies that offer this. For example, metroPCS which offers unlimited calls. No minute counting.
    For $40 a month, you get unlimited local and long distance calls.

    --
    I currently have no clever signature witicism to add here.
    1. Re:And then? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 4, Informative

      No, not free including international. But good enough for most people concerned about phone minutes that live in MetroPCS's extremely limited coverage area.

      MetroPCS is not designed with globetrotters in mind.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  3. Re:Hmm by ndansmith · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I'm guessing Cringely has made a predictio

    I'm guessing he has made an investment, too.

  4. Voice compression hell by Strom+Carlson · · Score: 5, Informative

    By running from Skype to a mobile phone, you use two fairly crappy codecs: iLBC at 13 kilobits per second on top of GSM at 12 kilobits per second. On their own, each one is marginally tolerable, but I would rather gouge my eardrums out with a dagger than listen to the two codecs combined.

  5. Sure it's free, you just ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... have to pay $60/month minimum for two-phone wireless service and 2c a minute to termine the call at a real phone.

    You've met "free-as-in-speech" and "free-as-in-beer" -- now meet "free-as-in-really-expensive"! Yayyyy capitalism!!

  6. Re:This was done before... by Meniconi,Nando · · Score: 4, Informative
  7. Re:This was done before... by MDMurphy · · Score: 4, Informative
  8. Free? by Blindman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The plan requires two active cellular phone connections. Last I checked that isn't free. Sure, it will be cheaper than actually making direct calls, but that is not the same as free. Furthermore, it doesn't sound like it handles incoming calls, so really what you have is a flat fee for unlimited outgoing calls. This doesn't sound particularly free.

    --
    I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person that I'm preaching to.
  9. Re:Link to Microsoft.com? by NetNifty · · Score: 5, Informative

    You're using Firefox I guess? If firefox doesn't recognise a url entered as a url it does an "I'm Feeling Lucky" google search on the "url" entered. The link is broken and is starts with "http" and the first result on searching for http (and thus the I'm Feeling Lucky link) on Google is Microsoft.com.

  10. Read the ToS carefully.. by Myself · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You might find that connecting the cellphone to the bridge device contradicts some term in the contract. If they figure out that this is what you're doing, they might decide to hit you with $0.50/min for all the "breach of contract" minutes, or something similarly evil.

    The mobile-to-mobile minutes are free for two reasons. First, they don't have to pay a termination fee for moving the call to someone else's network. Second, it's a sales tool to get your friends to sign up. By doing this, you sabotage the second goal, and they'll try everything possible to make your life miserable.

  11. No good business model goes unpunished by G4from128k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Technology seems to be increasing the economic efficiency of the marketplace by supporting a type of business model arbitrage. If somebody offers something for less than it really costs or is really worth, people use technology to quickly find a way to exploit it.

    For example, cell companies offer free in-system minutes to encourage friends & family to recruit new customers -- a nice little viral marketing ploy and something that, I'm sure, reduces stress in friends & family cell phone conversations. But it also creates an opportunity because those free in-system minutes are worth something if they can be somehow converted to out-of-system calls. Hence the motivations for this little hack.

    Or consider the case of the single-use video camera. The unit is offered at a subsidized price (less than the true price of the camera) with the expectation that the consumer will return the camera and pay for the DVD conversion service. With a bit of hacking, though, a person can get a low-grade digital video camera for only single-use price of about $20.

    Technology allows people to exploit these situations (and publish the results), much to the chagrin of the businesses that use these models. I wonder if this will drive businesses to a true pay-for-what-you-get mode of operation. No cell minutes will be free because it will be too easy to abuse free minutes. No single-use device will be as cheap -- it will require a deposit for the value of the asset.

    That technology allows people to use products and services in unintended ways will force companies to change their products or business models to either lock-out unintended uses or build in a charge for the cost of those uses.

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
  12. Another way by eugeneiiim · · Score: 5, Funny
  13. Re:Hmm by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'll do you one better. I have a $12 asterisk card. I have a landline that allows me to make unlimited calls in the Richmond, VA area. I have broadband.

    I don't care if my landline is tied up most of the time, I have a cellphone finally (just got my first a few months back). Maybe you're in a similar situation. Maybe you'd buy a $12 asterisk card too.

    If we set up the hardware correctly, well then, I can make long distance calls to your area, and you to mine, and it won't cost us anything. Better yet, technically, your grandma down the road, who doesn't even have a computer, could make a LD call to Richmond VA, without it showing up on her bill. She dials into your asterisk machine, it puts it through over broadband to mine. My grandma could do the same thing... or for that matter, anyone in Richmond could do the same thing.

    Why would I do this, you ask? Because even if I only cheat the bastard phone companies out of a nickel of long distance revenue, I consider it a victory.

    Anyone feel like helping?

  14. Re:Free? by raju1kabir · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It's a better plan over here in the UK, where we don't have to pay to receive calls. (why you lot put up with paying for incoming calls, I don't understand....)

    Because when you add everything up, it's cheaper that way.

    Remember, you don't only receive calls, you make them too (even if you personally only receive calls, there would be no calls to receive if people in general weren't making them).

    Studies have shown again and again in that receiver-pays markets (e.g., USA, Singapore, China), the total amount paid by consumers per unit of mobile phone airtime is lower.

    This is because the person who is paying for the call is the same person who has market power in the relationship with the service provider. In the caller-pays system, the person who is paying for the call has no way to express their dissatisfaction with the rate by switching to a different provider, so it is not a competitive factor. The people who pay have to put up with whatever rates are in effect, or not make the call at all.

    Caller-pays is a huge swindle, built on a transparent lie, and it's costing European consumers billions.

    --
    "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS