VoIP quality
John Chambers
jc at trillian.mit.edu
Sat May 21 19:02:02 EDT 2005
Doug Sweetser wrote:
|
| I am trying to pitch SpeakEasy's voice over IP to my girlfriend.
| Right now we are connected via dial-up through Verizon. It looks like
| it will cost about $84/month to go with SpeakEasy:
|
| $50 DSL service
| $ 6 Payoff to Verizon for _dropping_ the phone line
| $25 VoIP service
| $ 3 Taxes
|
| Her current reservation is that she want to hear from someone else who
| has this service and is satisfied with the quality of calls. I can
| understand how the baby bells all want us to worry about this new
| technology. If anyone here has the service, any reviews would be
| appreciated.
We got their VoIP service pretty soon after they started offering it
here. One funny problem that we had at first was that when my wife
called home from her (T-Mobile) cell phone, she would often miss the
first syllable or two when I started speaking. This happened after
every pause, not just at the beginning of a call, so it was a bit of
a hassle. Then she replaced her 2-year-old cell phone with a newer
model, and the problem went away. So it probably wasn't Speakeasy's
fault, at least not entirely. More likely it was T -Mobile's doing.
One thing that has produced a bit of discussion in tech fora is that
a lot of ISPs are now offering VoIP, and some of them program in a
bias for their own VoIP packets. This often causes sporadic delays
and dropouts when the two ends use different services, as both
services give low priority to the other's packets. I've read that the
FCC is looking into this, but nothing has happened yet.
One restriction here (Waltham MA) is that they only support
connecting to a single phone. They say that this is because they
can't guarantee reliability with a lot of old house phone wiring.
They are working on it, but can't say when they'll support house
wiring. Their advice is to get one of the N-phone cordless phone
packages, and plug the VoIP adapter into the cordless base station.
We already had a 3-phone cordless setup, so it was no big deal. If
you have a lot of wired house phones, replacing them with a cordless
phone package could be a bit of an expense. OTOH, cordless phones are
good enough now that you may be glad to be forced to make this
change. (But look for one that doesn't use the same frequencies as
your wifi. ;-)
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