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The World of Computing and Solutions


13
November

VOIP Yahoo Messenger with Voice, GoogleTalk, and Skype

posted November 13th, 2006 posted posted by Loz

VOIP (Voice Over IP Phone Service)

You know the cost savings of voice over IP phone service, but only about 16% of small to midsize businesses have made the switch to VoIP, according to a survey by technology consultancy Savatar. Why? Because most Internet Phone services don’t offer communication packages designed for small businesses. Now that’s changing, with a variety of tiered services that can fit nearly any business model.

There are two basic types of VoIP service. The first is designed to replace your existing landline phone with VoIP. Such services are offered by traditional phone companies (AT&T’s CallVantage and Verizon’s VoiceWing), cable companies (Time Warner Cable’s digital phone and Comcast’s Digital Voice), and VoIP pioneers such as Vonage and Packet8.

Vonage is atthe forefront. Its $49.99 Small Business Unlimited Premium package includes unlimited local and long-distance calls anywhere in the U.S., Canada, and Puerto Rico, as well as dedicated fax line, unlimited call forwarding, and the ability to send all voice mail to an e-mail account. Additional lines cost around $12.99 for 500 minutes.

The second type of VoIP service is the free or nearly free services such as Yahoo Messenger with Voice, GoogleTalk, and Skype. These software applications let you place calls from a PC or connected handset to other users of the same serivice at no charge. Most also let you call out to regular phone numbers for just a couple cents per minute.

The leader in this category is Skype, which even allows you to purchase a regular phone numbers so that people with traditional phones can call you on your PC. Skype also offers free conference calls, file transfers during calls, call forwarding, and several for-pay features. Skype for Business includes free software that lets group administrators purchase Skype Credits and then track and distribute them to employees, who can use them for Skype premium services such as calls to regular phone numbers and voice mail.

VoIP isn’t a perfect solution. The issue of 911 service has yet to be satisfactorily resolved, calls are sometimes dropped, audio quality is occassionally inferior, and when the power goes out, so does the phone service. But according to the Savatar survey, 91% of SMB’s that have adopted VoIP would recommend or highly recommend it to others.

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