A
Basic, Basic Intro
What
is it?
Most
people are familiar w/ NetMeeting and other software that let you
talk to others over the internet. VOIP is similar. However, it also
uses your phone - the interface we're all familiar with.
Instead
of connecting your phone to the wall, you connect it to a box either
the VOIP company provides or you buy on your own. This is the modem.
You need highspeed/broadband internet for this. Your modem plugs
into your cable/dsl modem and now it can 'talk' btwn your phone
and the internet.
Your
phone lines already do pretty much what VOIP does, just w/ different/older
technology (well, some of it's new w/ optics and such, but...).
How
hard is it to setup?
It's
actually very easy. Assuming you have the company send you a modem
or you buy a kit at the store, you simply plug the modem btwn your
current cable/dsl modem and your computer (e.g., the out from your
cable modem now goes to the new box and the out from that to your
computer). It also has a phone jack for your regular phone.
Once
it is on, it will boot up and configure itself.
What
are the benefits?
There
are many benefits depending on the company you go w/, but here are
a few I have (all of these are free w/ the monthly fee- $14.99 for
my setup):
Features
like caller id, call waiting, call waiting caller id, call forwarding,
etc.
Voicemail
Email alerts for new voicemail.
Web access to voicemail - you can play your messages on your computer.
Auto-forward - if the phone is ever down or isn't answered, it's
auto-routed to another number
Online management of all features, settings, account, etc.
Computer dialing - highlight any number on your computer, hit F6
and it sets up the call from your phone to theirs - very convinient!
Keep your regular phone (you don't need a voip phone)
There are some other cool features available for extra $ like the
softphone which lets you use your computer as a phone w/o the modem
- this means you can take your laptop w/ you wherever and you have
your phone w/ the same phone number everywhere too (you can do this
w/o the softphone, but you have to take your VOIP modem around w/
you - not bad if you're going somewhere for a longer trip).
Another
really cool thing is the virtual phone numbers. You can get extra
numbers that ring the same phone, but they are local numbers to
any area code you want. So if I live in Dallas and have family in
New York, I can get a local phone number here and there. That way
my family in New York can call a local number (free) and talk to
me! Vonage charges $4.99/month for that. I'm not sure about the
others.
And
the biggest benefit - IT'S CHEAP! I pay $14.99 plus some tax and
such, but not the ump-teen taxes, charges, fees, etc. like the phone
company charges.
Also,
if you do a little research/reading, you can set it up to where
every phone jack in your house is wired for VOIP. It's little more
than plugging the output of your VOIP modem into the wall jack you
already have. Very little more.
Bottom
Line
You
get lots of good, free features and options for doing/managing a
lot more including a lot over the web and it's SO much cheaper (at
least it is for me!). Being the 'average guy' I am, I don't really
use all the features. Fortunately, it's pretty much a 'set it up
and forget about it' type thing except that I save $40+/month w/
it!
I use
Vonage b/c that's what I was told about first and it was one of
the first. There are others and I'm sure they have their strengths,
but Vonage has the cheapest base option at the time I did my research.
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