With SIP based VoIP latency isnt an issue as long as your line can handle the packet overhead of approx. 90kbps. SIP implicitly brokers the packet, finding the shortest hop, etc. bilaterally.
I would check out vonage.com to get more info but the point of their product is to provide telephone service outside of the PSTN and local exhanges. This is true between Vonage customers, obviously not when it's a Vonage to Verizon call, etc.
deejaycez
If you have a regular telephone service then bring the service down to it's lowest cost per month then setup a Vonage DigitalVoice service and you're taking advantage of all the features and all you can call plans.
deejaycez
Not a question of whether it is hard to do but more a question of buy in at the business/market level. They have it in their "future" plans. Cezanne
Actually you do need an upstream/downstream of more than 90k to really be able tap into the services. So it is a very valid question. deejaycez
What area code are you in?
With SIP based VoIP latency isnt an issue as long as your line can handle the packet overhead of approx. 90kbps. SIP implicitly brokers the packet, finding the shortest hop, etc. bilaterally. I would check out vonage.com to get more info but the point of their product is to provide telephone service outside of the PSTN and local exhanges. This is true between Vonage customers, obviously not when it's a Vonage to Verizon call, etc. deejaycez
If you have a regular telephone service then bring the service down to it's lowest cost per month then setup a Vonage DigitalVoice service and you're taking advantage of all the features and all you can call plans. deejaycez
It actually works with DSL, it's a boradband telephone service.