First Free Mobile-to-Mobile Cross-Platform Calls
bombduck writes "Barablu demonstrates free calling from Nokia Series 60 based phones to Windows Mobile phones and PDAs using a Wi-Fi connection. Both Nokia E Series and N Series Wi-Fi enabled phones tested, showing not only Voice but IM, video and conference calling.
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I wonder how long - if this takes off - it'll take for someone to set up a program on their device to auto-IM spam anyone it can connect to.
from the article:
Really? so the copy of messenger that is built into recent wm2k* based phones, and the aim and jabber clients I have don't count then? pah.
"Success is based on knowing how far to go in going too far"
Free calls within WiFi range? I might as well just get up and go talk face to face. Hell, WiFi range is pretty close to "shouting range" anyway, why leave my seat?
Hi--sorry to bug you at Starbucks like this. You don't know me. I'm in the bathroom. Can you tell me - does this look infected to you? It feels infected...
can other Wi-Fi stuff play, like palms/PDA's, gameboys, PSP's, and the latest crop of consoles? from the Website it looks like they only support PC, Pocket-PC, and phones from i-mate and Nokia, but that would be a great feature to add to the PSP.
Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
With the Nokia E70 -- it's got a sip dialer already. The problem is finding a wifi network where you want to make a call. If you could get it going at home and office that'd be plenty for a lot of people. I still need to investigate the possibility of connecting to my home asterisk server through T-Mobile's unlimited data service, either directly from the cell or by installing asterisk on the laptop and connecting to the Internet through the phone's bluetooth modem and then running an ad-hoc wifi network on the laptop. That would be sick! I'm not sure their data service provides enough bandwidth to run a voip call, but it's a neat idea.
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
How long until providers disable this, so they can force you to go through their network and spend your minutes/data access fees.
I know I may be wrong, but if it makes the headline, it must be a great acomplishment performed by top engineers who have spent weeks to study and configure the two phones until they finaly managed to connect them.
If it is true, and even if it is free, it would be a big step backward from classic GSM/GPRS/UMTS.
If it is false, why make a story about two guys calling each other?
Some other comments have alluded to this, but to make it explicitly clear, these guys aren't strictly the first to do this. The beauty of SIP (which is the protocol in question) is that it is interoperable with any of these platforms already, as long as the user has a SIP client, they can make voice and video calls to other platforms. I'm not sure about each mobile phone, but PDAs definitely already have this capability using SJPhone. Still, anything to make people aware of SIP is a good thing, cause it is confusing at first, but once you look into it it becomes clear that SIP, or something similarly open, is the future of both fixed and likely mobile communication.
Wonderful! If this stuff becomes popular on a large scale, how long will it be before we have really cheap mobile phone calls/transfers as opposed to the current situation, in which mobile telcos control all networks and extort their customers with ridiculous voice and data fees?
Slashdot Burying Stories About Slashdot Media Owned
Perhaps this, along with those audio player FM adapters for cars, are the beginning of the mobile, ever changing network envisioned by (I'm pretty sure anyway, I sometimes get stories confused) Cory Doctorow in Eastern Standard Tribe of the highway network. I already think it would be cool to get one of those adapters and a digital display for the back window that displays an FM frequency that would allow people driving along beside you to hear your music, perhaps with a little hacking one of these could be used to create ad-hoc networks of groups of similarly equipped cars. There's always the potential for abuse, but honestly anything can be abused- I doubt you're going to give up your email or IM because of how people currently abuse it.
Anyway, I'd love to be able, on long car trips, to shop the cars around me for some good music to listen to along the way, and to perhaps grab new songs from them. It would also be a neat way to comment on the drivers around you.
SilverRX8FL> Turn off your damn blinker!
AUTO-REPLY WrldsBstGranma> Naptime
Evil will always win, because Good is DUMB
Well that's just extremely cool! This allows for peer-to-peer without service provider. Now if every phone gets anonimized routing built-in, we no longer need any providers for longer-range calls anymore either. Great for connectivity in time of disaster.
So, no more RIAA/MPAA Big Brothering invading your privacy to check with whom you trade your (home-made, of course) MP3's or movies. Will this finally pop the bubble of bubble-gum "artists"?
Visit http://ringbreak.dnd.utwente.nl/~mrjb/growingbettersoftware to download your free copy of the book
...and the cellular service providers whisper "DMCA" and post a 'fix' for this in 3... 2... 1...
- Just my $0.02, take with a grain of salt, your mileage may vary.
I like this line from TFA: "You pay only EUR2/month to start receiving calls for free."
Even though T-Mobile is just GPRS (with EDGE in a few places) the bandwidth isn't the real issues with that situation working, its the latency.
/.'ers:
I've got to run to a meeting so I can't provide the full GPRS specs but most GPRS transmitters allocate a smaller number of channels to uploading, so despite my original claim that bandwidth isn't the issue it still is. So the either way, your not going to be able to make a VoIP call over T-Mobile's current data network.
For the other
1) Has anyone tried this on a 3G network Sprint/Verizon? How is the latency there?
2)I know someone wants to fill in the GPRS technical specs I glossed over...
When I have a kid, I want to put him in one of those strollers for twins and then run around the mall looking frantic.
The BlackBerry IM has been around for a while, and it also has software to run Yahoo, GTalk, and MSN.
My mobile already supports video conferencing, although I've never used the feature (it's a lot more expensive than voice calls). The only new thing is doing this over WiFi, rather than the cellular network, using a mobile 'phone.
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Countdown to SIP and H323 over WiFi ability of modern phones being locked down / arbitrarly over charged by american phone service providers :
3... 2... 1...
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
http://www.truphone.com/
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/communications/wireless/0, 39020348,39283143,00.htm
John