Internet Phones Replacing POTS In Japan 231
prostoalex writes: "CNN reports on growth of Internet phone services in Japan. The high cost of telephone calls, which many saw as an impediment to spread of the Internet is right now actually a menace to plain old phone companies, as more and more people are switching to VoIP services."
Replacing pot? (Score:2, Funny)
Off-topic? (Score:2)
Could someone please enlighten us as to what POTS is since the /. editors are too incompetent?
Thanks.
Re:Off-topic? (Score:2)
I agree, spelling it out woulda been nice. But I did have fun with my pot joke. heh.
Worthless trivia: AT&T Broadband sometimes lists the city in which a customer is in in their addie, for some reason Portland was shortened to 'potlnd'. Heh. I see that every time I go on IRC.
Overload. (Score:5, Funny)
I want my free Phone Back (Score:1)
I wish Dialpad were still free ;)
I have been looking but not seeing any new free PC to Phone stuff out there. It looks athat all you get are years old google references now and a few insanely complicated linux solutions -- All I want is my free phone calls back so I can call anywhere in the country (us) again.
A Cheapskate I may be, but I have more stuff than thee. - Me
Re:I want my free Phone Back (Score:1)
Not only slashdotted (Score:1, Offtopic)
Well that's a relief.. (Score:1)
Re:Well that's a relief.. (Score:1)
Re:Well that's a relief.. (Score:1)
Re:Well that's a relief.. (Score:2, Insightful)
by stef0x77 on Tuesday August 20, @05:37PM (#4107654)
(User #529972 Info | http://slashdot.org/)
OTOH, because of the high phone costs, dial up access to the internet in Japan is insanely expensive. An impediment to getting online for many people.
(it's posts like this that made/make me worry)
Re:Well that's a relief.. (Score:1)
As you are going to live about a year,
subscribe ADSL. it's widely
available and higher quality than in U.S.
as far as I know(I'm Japanese and have
friends in California.). Most provider
are servicing 8Mbps and 12Mbps.
Second option(if ADSL isn't available) is
to use wireless internet service called
Air H". it proviedes 128k connection
w/ flat rate.
Both cover most of mets area.
Yes, traditional dial up connection is
expensive in Japan. but ADSL and wireless
connection became so popular, less and
less people are depending on it. I personally
don't use dial-up anymore.
Re:Well that's a relief.. (Score:2)
expensive in Japan. but ADSL and wireless
connection became so popular, less and
less people are depending on it. I personally
don't use dial-up anymore.
Am I the only one that finds it ironic that ADSL (which, unless Japan is even more funky then I previously knew about) which runs over POTS, is cheaper to get then just a plain old POTS dial up line?
Bleck, VoIP isn't
Re:Well that's a relief.. (Score:2)
Uh, the theoretical maximum for ADSL is 8mbps, and that's only achievable over short distances. To get 12mbps you need HDSL or VDSL, but those are even shorter ranged.
Perhaps you're thinking of something else? Or maybe you're getting scammed? :)
I was smoking crack (Score:2)
See subject.
Fast ADSL, 11.something MBps.
Cringely (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Cringely (Score:3, Insightful)
but the problem is that the telephone is something that has been around for eons when compared to the age of the internet. and people have a certain level of psychological loyalty to the institution of the phone company - desired or not... and its this state of mind (the phone bill is like the dial tone - its always there) which thwarts the efforts of businesses to capitalize on VOIP.
even though everyone likes to bitch about their phone bills and the prices per minute that they are paying, its going to take the mob mentality to really cause a difference here in the states.
it boils down to simplicty conquering lazyness of american consumers i.e. the phone is as simple as it can get. go buy one for ten bux - plug it into the wall. the phone company does the rest. the only thing you have to remember is your phone number. and for some, that can be hard enough.
so until we can get close to that with VOIP capable devices... it will be an uphill battle to get them fully adopted.
when you compare a shopping list of items that most of the consumer market associate with real VOIP (if they even know what it is) calls (computer (obviously not in this article... but the mindset of voip is voip==computer required) internet connection (==$50/month), *knowledge* ("but I dont know enough"), etc...) - to the phone, its a no brainer for people who want the lazy way out. even if they are paying "evil mci" etc too much.
besides - people like hating the companies they pay their bills to.
so whats really important at this point is to get people to see that VOIP is not just available, as good or cheaper - but JUST AS EASY as the phone. then we will get the ball rolling. and thats where these companies need to spend their marketing *and* development dollars.
Not entirely accurate... (Score:2)
Anyway, it's very difficult to justify the savings on long distance when the quality is so bad, and traditional long distance in the US can be had for as low as 2.9 a minute if you shop around.
Also, keep in mind that you won't be eliminating one bill, but merely shifting your money from one vendor to another. As the need for broadband becomes more prevalent, I believe you'll see broadband providers tax usage more and more to pay for their infrastructure. There's already been
So, no, VoIP is not yet a clearly better choice for the American consumer. give it another 10 years, I say. And by that time, maybe the POTS providers will be the ones leading the charge.
Re:Cringely (Score:2)
Re:Cringely (Score:3, Insightful)
lantency in VOIP
It wouldn't look bad when you are just chitchating with your friends with 1-2 seconds lagging in between, but it'd look awkward when your peer is an extremely short-temper but important client.
If you don't believe me try calling your mother-in-law over VOIP.
But dial-up access costs a fortune. (Score:1)
POTS free for 2 years (Score:1)
Re:POTS free for 2 years (Score:2)
Cell phones are only usable if your telephone usage style is extremely basic.
If you depend on routing calls around, intelligent decisions based on caller ID and time, etc., then you need something with a standard interface so you can connect to other equipment capable of taking your instructions and acting on them.
In a home, some of this is just hobbyist geekery, but it really does make life easier once you get it going. In a business, it's pretty much essential unless the phone is not a significant tool in the particular line of work involved.
Re:POTS free for 2 years (Score:2)
I just don't understand the use of it in a home setting? I already have my cellphone with free long distance.
Free international? I doubt it. The article expressly talks about a call from Japan to NYC
I live in Italy and we have a 10 mpbs internet connection with fastweb [fastweb.it] which includes unlimited local and national calling. It's all voip without a noticable depreciation in vox quality.
Re:POTS free for 2 years (Score:2)
Depends on where you live. For me, the numbers work out like this:
POTS with unlimited local: $42/month
Cell phone with free LD: $44/month.
The cell phone looks like a no brainer. Sure it isn't unlimited talk time, but it is more than I use, and while I don't use the LD often, it is nice to have. It also work more places than the regular phone. Did I mention that voice mail, and callerID are included in the cell phone, but extra for POTS?
Hint: There is no law or moral requirement that you answer the phone. In fact, it is immoral to have your phone on in church. (If you are on call you can get away with it on vibrate) It is immoral to answer the phone when you are having a face to face conversation with someone else. (unless you warned the other party you are expecting a call, and then use callerId to take no other calls) It is immoral to answer the phone at dinner. (unless you are expecting a call, including being on call)
When you realise that you are not a slave to the phone, then the cell phone becomes a nice convience. When you are a slave to the phone, jumping when it rings, waiting for a call, then you will hate a cell phone.
The beef (Score:2)
" More than 300,000 people have signed up for the service from BB Technologies Corp., a subsidiary of Tokyo Internet company Softbank Corp. That's easily more than three times the estimated U.S. consumer market. The service, which began in April, doesn't require a new telephone. With a book-sized modem, one gets voice quality comparable to that of regular voice lines -- at a fraction the cost.
Subscribers to Softbank's Yahoo broadband Internet service get voice over Internet for free. Non-subscribers pay about $10 per month including modem rental after a $30 installation fee. Users keep their same phone number. The broadband service is an asymmetric digital subscriber line that runs over existing wires."
The bones (Score:2)
With a book-sized modem, one gets voice quality comparable to that of regular voice lines -- at a fraction the cost.
They forget to say, "and with a hundred times the random dropouts."
Granted, I haven't personally tried the service so I can't say anything from personal experience, but here in Japan the Yahoo BB! (ADSL) service is widely recognized as the worst in the country in both connectivity and customer service, and I have to admit I'd be surprised if they can do much better than that on VoIP. Thanks, but I'll stick with my 7c/3min NTT phone line for now.
This has been a long time coming... (Score:2)
The phone companies will soon have to change their revenue strategies completely in order to enjoy the large market they've had in the past. AT&T continues to raise their prices (up to $.17/minute for long distance now) Pac Bell (here in California) now has value-added services galore. Broadband is being pushed hard (they now have stands set up in the grocery stores for crying out loud)
Just as pagers are slowly becoming obsolete so are home phones. They are still handy, but it's becoming increasingly difficult to justify the ever-increasing cost of having one, particularly when the taxes on them are starting to become almost as expensive as the service itself. You don't have to take my word for it; anyone reading this who lives in the Bay Area (CA) have a look at the taxes you pay on your phone. Ouch!
Re:This has been a long time coming... (Score:5, Insightful)
sure, some people may enjoy a 'tax relief' but it is only a temporary one.
I know somebody who had his phone line shut off, went completly VoIP and cell. He had to pay about 2 bucks a month NOT to be connected.
Re:This has been a long time coming... (Score:1)
Okay, I don't get it. How does he end up paying $2/month not to be connected? Who is charging him this? Does he get a bill from AT&T every month for two bucks? He should just not pay it...
I'm not trying to be sarcastic, I'd genuinely like to know what you mean.
Re:This has been a long time coming... (Score:1)
What could the phone company do, come and reconnect him for nonpayment?
Re:This has been a long time coming... (Score:2)
hmm.... anyone want to join a class action law suit against pacbell / sbc with me?
Re:This has been a long time coming... (Score:2, Informative)
hmm.... anyone want to join a class action law suit against pacbell / sbc with me?
Don't get me wrong, it still sucks, you just couldn't sue them for it.
Re:This has been a long time coming... (Score:2)
so - my phone lines having dialtone run over them is *not* a requirement for me to have DSL. hence the possibility of a class action law suit claiming that PACBELL is unfairly tieing the to services together. kinda like MS and IE.
Re:This has been a long time coming... (Score:2)
Re:This has been a long time coming... (Score:2)
Which is to say, that it makes the telephone company MORE MONEY to sell you POTS alongside DSL than it does for them to just rent you a dry pair.
Which is to say, that it costs you MORE MONEY to buy POTS alongside DSL than it does to just rent a dry pair.
Which is to say... who am I kidding? Did you fail your elementary math class, or are you just trolling?
Great service with Vonage. (Score:5, Informative)
They provide a Cisco ATA186. The only downsides are:
The advantage over cell phone is that there are no minutes! It is $39.95 a month and you can choose which area code you want a phone number in. You can forward it to a cell phone when out, or any other phone that you may be at.
Re:Great service with Vonage. .. Latency?? (Score:3, Insightful)
How bad have you found it?
Re:Great service with Vonage. .. Latency?? (Score:2, Informative)
The largest contibution to latency is the encoding and decoding codecs -- that is, the translation from an audible analog signal to a digital signal and back again. The more compression that is desired, the longer this takes. The actual transmission over a network -- using UDP or anything else -- is negligable and has little to do with the packets being UDP or old-world "TDM" voice.
Of course, those UDP packets (the VoIP traffic) can be prioritized over non-VoIP traffic, if the routers support such prioritization and there is a way to mark high-priority packets. DIFFSERV [ietf.org] is one such mechanism to do this.
Re:Great service with Vonage. (Score:2)
Re:Great service with Vonage. (Score:2)
what I wanted to know - which neither you nor they talk about, and what I have mentioned in a previous post - is that SBC/PACBELL *requires* that I maintain a phone with "basic monthly service" (dialtone) in order to have DSL. this means that if I were to sign up for vonage I would have the following bills:
phone: 10.69 (says its the "flat rate service" - its actually 19.10 for me after adding caller id and anon call reject)
DSL: 64.95 - I have statics - it seems you cant have static ips for vonage?
vonage: 40.00
==115.00/month about for phone.
that sounds cool - but when I look at my current bill from sprint 5 cents anytime for 2 months of usage: 58.00
thats 2 months of calling... so it doesnt really work out. however I ****HHAATTEE**** phone companies (they are all theives) so that is my major incentive for switching.
but what I want to know is how the one guy setup the free nationwide calling from payphones through vonage - that sounds like something i definitely want to try...
Re:Great service with Vonage. (Score:2)
Re:Great service with Vonage. (Score:2)
If you want $40.00 off, just send me a note with your email via my form [sorehands.com] and I will have them send you an email getting you $40 off of your service.
Re:At that price, Vonage is useless. (Score:2)
I found that Vonage [vonage.com] is more reliable and sounds better than than SprintPCS.
Your $80 figure is only correct, if you are getting DSL/Cable internet only for VoIP. Then you are correct.
Re:At that price, Vonage is useless. (Score:1)
Re:At that price, Vonage is useless. (Score:3)
Ditch the cell phone and you're only paying $40.
And I'd love to hear about a cell plan that provides "unlimited minutes" for $40 a month. There are about 41,000 minutes in a month, and the sun is shining during most of the ones I want to use.
If you happen to have friends or family in an area served by Vonage, you can pick that area code, and they can all call you for free, which means that you can give them something without having to change their behavior.
Also -- Around here, payphones claim that they won't accept incoming calls, but it's a lie; they do. Using xringd, I call my house twice for two rings each, then it calls me back, then I enter a code and it bridges me a dialtone on the Vonage line (through the miracle of X-10's low-voltage connector wired to a little DP relay). That gives me free nationwide calling from pay phones as long as I have a couple quarters in my pocket to loan to the phone for a few secs.
As I find cell phones to be hatefully annoying, this is a much better deal. I can use the same mechanism to check my messages or have my email read to me (still ironing out the kinks on that one; at the moment I can't interrupt a long boring message).
Re:At that price, Vonage is useless. (Score:2)
I'd rather ditch POTS. I pay the same for my cell phone as for POTS, and I get more minutes than I need. Sure in theory POTS is unlimited, while the cell phone limites me to 1600 minutes a month (1000 weekend only too!), but in practice, I don't use the phone that much anyway.
Remember everyone is different. I haven't used my POTS line yet this year (I only keep it because I have to have it to get DSL, though other broadband should be here anytime now). Other people use the phone more than me, and a cell phone won't work. I used to move around a lot, and my cell phone number never changes, while the POTS number would change each time. I'm single, so that is a factor, I'm not trying to save money by sharing a line and phone with a family.
Re:At that price, Vonage is useless. (Score:2)
It's cobbled together from shell scripts on top of vgetty [greenie.net].
I have a USRobotics Sportster Voice 33.6 modem which was a giveaway because nobody wants 33.6 modems anymore, but they work great for voice. I'm sure you can find them at those suburban computer flea market show things.
The two phone lines (one real and one from the Vonage box) are bridged using a little relay and some resistors from Radio Shack and this X-10 box [x10.com], in conjunction with the Firecracker set they gave away for $5 a couple years ago (and which I learned about from Slashdot).
The whole thing is an unsightly mess, both physically and software-wise, but it hangs together. I haven't made any changes in a while and I'm a little afraid to mess with it, though... The vgetty stuff was tricky to get right.
Re:At that price, Vonage is useless. (Score:2)
Long distance. No cell phone plan gives you unlimited long distance minutes for $40 a month. And even plans that give you unlimited, unrestricted "local" minutes must be pretty rare -- there certainly don't seem to be any in metropolitan areas like Los Angeles and New York. Most ~$40 plans in NY or LA give you a few hundred "anytime" minutes (that includes long distance of course) and a few thousand (not unlimited) "night and weekend" minutes. In many plans your "anytime" minutes are used up, even at night and on the weekends, before your "night and weekend" minutes take effect, rendering the whole deal little better than an advertising scam.
If you make lots of long distance calls, Vonage is fantastic. I am on the phone, LA-NY, at least an hour or two every day. With my AT&T "One Rate" cell phone, I was paying almost $200 a month (with taxes, fees, etc.) for 1500 minutes, with frequent billing errors, every one-minute dropped call charged for, plus outrageous overage fees of $0.25/minute if I went over the 1500 minutes -- some months I had a $350 bill. And AT&T Wireless is one of the slimiest companies I've hever had the displeasure of dealing with. Sprint, Verizon, etc. aren't much better.
Now I have Vonage and never have to worry about how long I'm on the phone. Of course I've kept my cell phone, on the minimum plan, for when I'm on the road, but I'm looking forward to giving AT&TWS the finger -- with wireless number portability [wirelessreport.net], it should soon be possible to keep my phone number and switch to a wireless provider I hate less.
Vonage is particularly good for my purposes. Most of the people I talk to are in New York, whereas I'm in Los Angeles most of the time. Since I can have my 212 number while I'm in LA (I did this with my cell phone too, of course), there are no toll charges for anyone whether I'm calling or being called by my New York friends and relatives. I can take the Cisco box anywhere there's a broadband connection, so nothing has to change if I move. And the ability to forward calls is a major advantage. When I travel, I forward the phone to (e.g.) my hotel number -- I can do this on the webpage from anywhere. Then, instead of wasting cell phone minutes or using a calling card or (God forbid!) paying inflated hotel toll charges, I simply tell people to call me on my Vonage number and it rings for me in the hotel!
Vonage might not be for everyone, but I would argue that anyone who makes a lot of long distance calls should consider it seriously. I know that there are other alternatives -- even "traditional" long-distance companies such as MCI [mci.com] seem to be getting into the act, with package deals including unlimited domestic long distance. I for one would rather deal with Vonage than with MCI! (Vonage's plan is also cheaper, has no installation fees, and no contract period. On the downside, if your broadband connection goes down, your "dialtone" does too -- so it's not for "five-nines" telco-style reliability).
I imagine that, sooner or later, there will be cell phone plans out there with unlimited long distance. But right now, Vonage is arguably the single best option out there for the heavy long-distance user.
Kiscica
Re:Great service with Vonage. (Score:2)
That $39.95 includes voicemail that can be picked up by a windows PC (drat, running Linux, so have to use the phone, or install Windows Media Player via CodeWeaver I suppose.)
While a POTS line is fine for local calls (I understand that there are some locations where a call across the street is billed per minute) in my area, Most of my family is a LD/Per Min call away.
I see Sprint is offering a 4500 min 39.95 deal, with 350 any time minutes, I suspect the rest is night/weekend minutes. While 4500 min is over three days of phone use, 350 min is five hours and 50 min. If you happen to have used all five hours and 50 min of those minutes, you are up to paying per min charges again, even if you have not touched the other 4150 min.
I have also had problems in my area ordering Pizza with my cell phone, and I won't even bother with my VoIP phone. Your milage may vary.
My total phone bill went down significantly after adding Vonage to my set of options, and droping my cell and POTS service to minimal requirements. What happens in your case remains to be seen.
-Rusty
Re:Great service with Vonage. (Score:2)
Yes, I'm calling you from the internet.
(pimply faced 16 yr old cashier): Er um.. You can talk to my manager, hacker d00d!
Re:Great service with Vonage. (Score:2)
Do you deliver to Hyw 169, on Cedar Lake?
Is that in Alameda?
No, St. Louis Park, MN
No, we only deliver in the SF area...
Oh, sorry, wrong phone...
-Rusty
VoIP (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:VoIP (Score:2)
True, it's not just Japan (Score:3, Interesting)
For example, it was only recently (about a year ago) that cellphones were introduced to the market. Despite the fact that government regulatory bodies have made it unnecessarily difficult for companies to enter this market, there are already 3 operators, and within a year that industry has injected well over $1 billion into the economy. People don't bother getting land phones now...if there's cellular/GSM available they'll use it.
Cybercafes are starting up at an almost alarming rate in cities all over Nigeria. One of the big markets that these cybercafes cater for is VoIP
At the rate at which this market is booming, I can imagine what would happen when broadband access becomes widely available for cheap prices. VoIP could all but replace the POTS as the standard means for international telephony, with mobile phones for local/long distance calls. By the time there is a solid national communications network in place with enough bandwidth, VoIP could even become the dominant means for local and long distance phone service, especially since it's already gaining serious popularity. The POTS could easily become totally irrelevant!
As far as I know, the situation in most African countries is similar to that of Nigeria, although many of them may not have the level of development in the comms industry that we do. But I believe that this continent probably has the largest potential market for VoIP (and mobile phones) right now.
POTS going out here as well... (Score:2)
I have a POTS now, but its mostly for my DSL to run over. When I move I'll either get Cable or a DSL provider that doesn't require a landline. Here's hoping Pacbell goes bankrupt.
Re:POTS going out here as well... (Score:2)
Same thing for me, but I always forget to pay the POTS phone bill. It's so completely non-important that I always put it in the Pay Later pile, which invariably turns into the Disconnection pile. I've spent almost $100 on calling cards to Japan in the last month. Do VoIP work international as well as they do domestic, and do most VoIP providors charge extra. I have no idea where to even look for reliable VoIP data. If my soon-to-be-wife has issues getting her greencard, I'm expecting many more phone cards to be purchased.
Re:POTS going out here as well... (Score:1)
Since you're using pre-paid phone cards, you might look into using a pre-paid dial-around service like bigzoo [slashdot.org] for your international calls. I call Japan for $0.064/minute with a $0.75 per month fee. Domestic long distance is $0.029/minute (home state included). I find this is cheaper, per minute, than my cell-phone bill. Based on actual usage anyway.
I'm pretty sure that to offer these kinds of prices to the consumer, bigzoo must be running VoIP somewhere along the line.
As with most things - YMMV...
Re:POTS going out here as well... (Score:2)
That and a lot of times when I call a cell phone using VoIP routed cards, there is a 2 second latency on the conversation which sucks horribly.
Re:POTS going out here as well... (Score:2)
go get two linejacks from quicknet.com (or phonejacks which are PCMCIA)
set them up as direct gateways - and you can call from your machine to her machine - and since they have DSPs built onand rather good software (even linux drivers) the quality will be pretty good.
although their managment sucks - their products are actually not bad.
otherwise see if that mail order bride company has one ready with her green card...
just kidding
good luck.
Re:POTS going out here as well... (Score:2)
The problem with this is that her computer is right next to the phone. Which, is right next to where her dad sleeps. She went over there 4 weeks ago, and promptly bought a cell phone so I can call her at any time. Pre-paid calling cards suck at this. One card will consistently route me to a rather polite, but disgrunted Japanese fellow. One gives me at least a 2 second latency, another refuses to make the connection 90% of the time.
The only calling cards that seem to work are those that are $0.05+ more a minute.
good luck.
Thanks, I leave to go over there (and get married) on Friday.
Re:POTS going out here as well... (Score:1)
In areas with cable broadband there's really no reason
Unless your home network has a redundant power supply you either need a cellphone or you can't be sure you can call 911 when you need to
Re:POTS going out here as well... (Score:2)
There are still those of us hold outs who just HATE cell phones though.
I keep on trying to lose mine but people keep on finding the damn thing. . . .
Boot your computer, I'm gonna call you !! (Score:1)
Note to those running servers at home: I wouldn't like to have one next to my bed
And those IP phones are quite expensive.
Re:Boot your computer, I'm gonna call you !! (Score:2)
Look into the Cisco ATA-186. You can plug an old-fashioned $5 POTS phone (or anything else that acts like one) into it. No computer required.
Re:Boot your computer, I'm gonna call you !! (Score:2)
Yes, I do. It came for free with a 1-year Vonage contract, though. And I see one on eBay for $40 at the moment.
Re:Boot your computer, I'm gonna call you !! (Score:2)
Re:Boot your computer, I'm gonna call you !! (Score:1)
hmm.. (Score:3, Funny)
Bandwidth? keep VOIP off my ethernet (Score:1, Informative)
Furthermore isn't Voip ultimately more expensive if you actually had to pay for it? I mean the reason internet service is so cheap right now is that I dont gobble bandwith 100% of the time. If everyone fully utilized their dsl connections theoretical I think we would all be paying more and getting crappier service.
Re:Bandwidth? keep VOIP off my ethernet (Score:2)
These games send a significant amount of traffic over the internet, yet most people don't bitch about them taking up the bandwidth.
Re:Bandwidth? keep VOIP off my ethernet (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, voice is very low bandwidth. You should be more concerned of someone mounting a remote harddisk while you are trying to talk to someone. Getting hit by a DoS while trying to call 911 would be a bad thing, too.
Re:Bandwidth? keep VOIP off my ethernet (Score:2)
Bandwith requirements for VoIP in ISDN quality: 64kbit/s. So it can easily fit into a DSL up and downlink. The backbones for voice can be used for data, too.
They are just a little bit too sophisticated for dumb packet switching.
> If everyone fully utilized their dsl connections theoretical I think we would all be paying more and getting crappier service.
This is true for every service, so lets ban everything, except gopher and a mail programs, except SNDMSG.
Why is there a need for a 3G mobile network? (Well, that's a question one shouldn't really think about it, because it could cost some people their job...)
At least theoretically, more bandwidth for data services.
See the positive side-effect:
All the unused reserves in bandwith for voice and data are then shared.
Re:Bandwidth? keep VOIP off my ethernet (Score:2)
"apt-get upgrade" or "emerge --world upgrade"?
At least for me, it's much more than I would telephone in a month.
At a local telco, the ISDN-"router" collapsed because of the number of data connections, not voice.
They were introducing a flat-rate in a region, where previously a state-monopol provided the only access.
>not neccessarily on the backbone.
Where then?
The access point? A dedicated set of 2-4 wires.
From the curb to the provider? Still dedicated lines to a dedicated splitter (assuming line-sharing), which splits the voice from data, to the DSLAM of the provider.
Now, it's all in the provider's backbone.
The provider? Every user must be able to at least use the web marginally and simultaniously with others, without disturbing the other users.
On a 12Mbit/s DSL connection, which qualifier would be most appropriate to describe 64kbit/s?
Re:Bandwidth? keep VOIP off my ethernet (Score:2)
Not really. For every VOIP call, you can take away one analog call, replacing it with a digital call. Digital allows you to put several calls on one wire, so in theory, if everyone moved to VOIP, then all those analog wires could be used for digital, and there would be MORE bandwidth than before.
Note, in practice, the phone companies moved most calls to digital except the wires closest to the customers. The theory applies though.
Phone companies shouldn't be scared.... (Score:3, Interesting)
If people are changing from my service to one that is more flexible and cheaper, then I am inevitably screwed.
These people need to take a lesson in business! As far as I see it, if a new technology is making my current service/product obsolete, then I need to study this new technology so that I can offer it myself. If thats not an option, well then you buy stock in whatever company is succeeding you! ;)
Seriously though... I do have a question about the "ownership" of the actual lines used to transmit the VoIP- The article states that it will be using existing wires, and users will have to pay a 'line fee' to the company that owns the physical wires. So does that give the owner any control over how it is used?
-ADR
Traceroute, at last... (Score:4, Interesting)
At my old home, I had a dialup connection to my ISP. About once or twice a month when I would dial in for the evening, I would hear *static* on the phoneline. I'm talking like a noisy AM radio type of static. I would hang up the modem, dial in again, and the static would be gone.
My best guess is that there was a faulty wire *somewhere* in the telco's network that was causing the static, and I was unfortunate enough for my call to end up on that wire. (Remember, POTS is a circuit switched network [techtarget.com], the same set of wires is used for the duration of the connection) Of course, when I called Verizon, there was absolutely no way for me to reproduce the problem reliably, so they couldn't do much to help. Had I some equivilent of a way to do a traceroute, I could simply say, 'the link between switch-5.verizon.net and switch-32.verizon.net is dropping packets, please put that in the trouble ticket so the techs can fix it'.
So yeah, I'm a little giddy about VoIP. Almost makes me wanna get a T1 to my current residence and drop the POTS line I have now... Well, I can dream, I suppose.
I'll stop babbling now...
Re:Traceroute, at last... (Score:2)
The same set of wires is used for every call. The only 'wire' likely is the one between your house and the CO. From the CO to the rest of the network it is very likely optical, unless you live in some stumblefuck rural area.
Re:Traceroute, at last... (Score:2)
My best guess is that there was a faulty wire *somewhere* in the telco's network that was causing the static, and I was unfortunate enough for my call to end up on that wire. (Remember, POTS is a circuit switched network [techtarget.com], the same set of wires is used for the duration of the connection)
On anything other that museum pieces the only individual set of wires are the local loop. Anything else is multiplexed over either copper or more likely fibre. A T1 isn't a bundle of 24 pairs it's a single 1.5M connection split into 24 channels. If it breaks 24 channels break, not one out of the 24.
Re:Traceroute, at last... (Score:2)
And they'll say... (Score:4, Insightful)
No, it won't make any difference.
Had I some equivilent of a way to do a traceroute, I could simply say, 'the link between switch-5.verizon.net and switch-32.verizon.net is dropping packets, please put that in the trouble ticket so the techs can fix it'.
Re:And they'll say... (Score:2)
Heh heh... maybe you just haven't had to deal with a telco/isp's helpdesk, or any helpdesk for that matter, and thus don't see the humor.
It won't matter, they have a standard "support" book they go through. Maybe it will change, maybe things will get better and they'll actually have a clue, and will understand you're trying to help them isolate a problem on their side of the demarc. But no, I doubt it. They'll make you go through rebooting your computer, even if it has nothing to do with the problem.
In Japan, all electronics are smaller. Houses are smaller. Cars are smaller. Laptops are smaller. Phones are smaller because they happen to like geewhiz tech and small implies better tech. I hate the Japanese slim phones, they are just way too fragile. Because I'm not the type to slip it gently into a suit pocket or a small purse. My phone is strapped to my hip, where it gets slammed into NYC pedestrians, scaffolding, handrails. It gets tossed into my backpack which gets dropped, thrown and banged around. Those slim phones wouldn't last a week.
I do like the ultraslim power supplies for the Japanese phones, that's something we need here. Let's get rid of those huge power bricks and get smaller, more energy efficient ones.
Vonage DigitalVoice (Score:4, Informative)
With some wrangling i've since taken the ata-186 router back to scotland with me. I work for a company in the USA and this gives me a californian phone number and (once i upgrade to the $40 service) unlimited minutes across the usa.
Latency doesn't seem to be a problem although i'm definitely with one of the better uk broadband providers. I'll also soon experiment with setting up QoS on my network to ensure that my 1024/256 doesn't saturate to the point that my voip packets drop.
The main downsides to vonage are:
- They dont let you have the password to the Cisco router which YOU have bought from them - meaning you cant use the second line or easily connect it to a h232 gatekeeper to do intelligent things with.
- They wont bill any credit card which doesn't have a US billing address and wont ship outside of the US (and guyana for some reason)
Re:Vonage DigitalVoice (Score:2)
They dont let you have the password to the Cisco router which YOU have bought from them - meaning you cant use the second line or easily connect it to a h232 gatekeeper to do intelligent things with.
[/quote]
Did you try "cisco"? When I had DSL service in Cincinnati, OH all the DSL modems had a password of cisco. That, and the password encryption that was used to store the password in the config was ROT-13. So if you could put a console on it and do the control-break startup procedure (don't know if it works on that model), you could probably decrypt the password.
Re:Vonage DigitalVoice (Score:2)
contact me on
grahamsz at another.com
My friends on slashdot (Score:2)
Or if you have any other questions then i'll try, although i've shared both the good and less-good about vonage.
s'more haiku.... (Score:2)
cost less than traditional
users migrating
Re:s'more haiku.... (Score:2)
Quality of Service
Doves do return
Burning question, (Score:4, Funny)
So in this utopian future, a script kiddie will be able to order a steak from my fridge, transport it to my oven, and burn it like my wife, with my stereo blaring "All your filet mignon are belong to us"?
VoIP to early to replace POTs (Score:1)
In Other News (Score:2, Funny)
Phones (Score:2, Insightful)
SPAMmability (Score:2)
Seems to me we've crested the peak and are heading down the other side of the spam curve.
Re:SPAMmability (Score:2)
Re:SPAMmability (Score:2)
AFIK, they are NOT the same thing. The call list is not federally mandated, it is just what they use. The Do Not Call list is required by Federal law, and must be maintained for 10 years.
interesting features (Score:3, Informative)
it was neat to see since really nobody uses them here in the states - but apparently it is really big over there.
cell phones will never replace pots (Score:2)
Re:duh... (Score:1)
In the year 2000, our homes will be controlled by computers, we will all have wireless internet, etc.
None of that actually happenned, only more subtle things like internet phones.
Quantum leap times consumers == ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Besides, I'm not holding my breath for next generation wireless. Actually, I believe slow pickup will be its savior, because I just don't believe the bandwidth is there even with 3G to support the beautiful things the telcos had been promising consumers (128 kilobit/sec of data to your handheld? Either the per-byte charges will be insane, or the bandwidth will run out as fast as you can say "porn").
Telephone poles will be there for a long time in locations where burying the cable is not an option. And as long as a cable pair will bring a fast consumer connection to the Internet equivalent of a CO more reliably and cheaply than wireless, I think "fixed wireless" is a lost proposition. Until the next quantum leap in wireless comes around. With wireless, the bottleneck is measured in gigabits per square mile. With wires, it's measured in megabits per cable pair. It just doesn't add up, per square mile.
Wireless is nice as a supplement to wired. That's why i-mode is so popular: it fills an important low bandwidth niche.
wiretaps (Score:2)
Your tax dollars at work.
With Internet, you at least have the chance that your calls get routed through China, South Korea Brazil or other rogue countries. Besides, there is way too much Internet traffic to look at.
A friend of mine worked at a big Dutch ISP, and our equivalent of the feds came and insisted they'd be allowed to place a wiretap. He showed them to the multi-wavelength fibers and wished them luck.