AOL Enters the VoIP market 168
freitasm writes "AOL is entering the VoIP market with its new service entitled 'AOL Internet Phone Service'. The service will be available in 40 cities around the US and offer integrated IM presence indicator, voice/e-mail and features like Call Waiting, CallerID. As a bonus current AOL members wil receive a wireless AP when signing-up for the service."
lol i can phone!!1 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:lol i can phone!!1 (Score:5, Funny)
(Ring, Ring)
Recipient: Hello? (rubs eyes)
Caller: Hi, did I wake you?
Recipient: Whaaa...?
Caller: I'm using VOIP, and it costs me next to nothing!
Recipient: (blinks)... you A-Hole!
Caller: Yep, AOL - how'd ya guess?
Re:lol i can phone!!1 (Score:2, Funny)
Knowing AOL (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Knowing AOL (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Knowing AOL (Score:2)
Re:Knowing AOL (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Knowing AOL (Score:2)
That, and it will cost roughly 5 times as much per month as Vonage or SpeakEasy.
Hmmm.... (Score:2, Funny)
Don't you think that'd be a little comlicated for the average AOL user? Maybe just have them talk into the air...it'd still be better then AOL's commercials.
It's as easy as point-and-click (Score:5, Funny)
And why isn't this thing being released in September?
Re:It's as easy as point-and-click (Score:2, Interesting)
More like "You've got telemarketers". I believe VOIP is not covered by the do not call list.
Re:It's as easy as point-and-click (Score:3, Informative)
Can you back up this statement? I have Vonage, and I'm on the do not call list, and it works -- haven't gotten a sales call in months.
Re:It's as easy as point-and-click (Score:2)
-matthew
Retro-ringtone (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Retro-ringtone (Score:1)
You've got the 4:30 Autogyro to Siam!
Re:It's as easy as point-and-click (Score:3, Informative)
Golf clap for the Eternal September reference. [catb.org]
Re:It's as easy as point-and-click (Score:1)
Now that would be a service I could get behind.
Emergency services (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Emergency services (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Emergency services (Score:3, Funny)
I KNOW... it only took EMS 36 hours to get from R.I. to Texas!
Re:Emergency services (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Emergency services (Score:1)
Re:Emergency services (Score:3, Informative)
From the Vonage Terms of Service:
2.10 Automated Location Identification
At this time in the technical development of Vonage 911 Dialing, it is not possible to transmit identification of the address that you have listed to the Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) and local emergency personnel for your area when you dial 911. You acknowledge and understand that you will need to st
Re:Emergency services (Score:1)
Re:Emergency services (Score:3, Informative)
The deal is that you tell Vonage where the "phone" is and they will send that information with the 911 call. The trouble occurs if you move the adapter and forget to tell Vonage and then call 911.
Then there is the uglier question about VoIP reliability vs. Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS). Lots of things need to work in order to place a VoIP call (power for the adapter, power for your internet infrastructure, the cable/DSL, etc.).
Re:Emergency services (Score:2)
Re:Emergency services (Score:3, Informative)
Most states require phone companies to maintain dial tone for 911 on any line connected to them.
So, there is a dial tone, you just can't dial anything except 911. Dialing any other number will get you a nice recording telling you the line is not in service.
Re:Emergency services (Score:1, Troll)
It's good that most states have such a law. It will help when the backhoe operator hits a gas line right after he cut through the telephone line. While the flames are shooting twenty feet high I will not worry as the mystical powers of the law keeps 911 working.
Re:Emergency services (Score:1)
Re:Emergency services (Score:1)
It's no different than a cell phone. If your phone is movable, you're going to have to tell the dispatcher where you are.
Re:Emergency services (Score:1)
Also, FWIW, companies are working on 911 for VOIP. Use the google genie for info about that too.
Shhhhhh! (Score:4, Funny)
AOL users don't have 911.
AOL users die.
No more AOL users!
It's genius.
Re:Emergency services (Score:1)
In Canada, the CRTC [crtc.gc.ca] just ruled [crtc.gc.ca] that VoIP providers must provide Basic 911 within 90 days of the ruling (the ruling was Apr 4/2005). Well, if you get down to the meat of it, some will have to provide Enhanced 911 services, but I don't know of any VoIP providers that would fit this category. Most will need to provide Basic 911 service:
Basic 9-1-1 service connects the caller to a central call centre which then connects the call to the correct emergency response centre, at which point the caller must ident
Re:Emergency services (Score:4, Insightful)
Get this; America now has 911 since 1990 but there is a small problem with addresses. In rural America a lot of places don't (didn't?) have simple things like a street sign so for the last few years a names has had to be labeled to all streets just for 911. So the lets look at it this way; we have survived a large time without 911 as we know it and 911 dispatchers haven't been able to send emergency assistance to the right location; yeah were working on it but if there is an emergency you'll figure out something even if you don't have a phone.
Re:Emergency services (Score:2)
Re:Emergency services (Score:2)
Actually they support full Enhanced 911 (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Emergency services (Score:1)
E911 delivers calls over traditional 911 trunks to the emergency center and delivers callback number and location information. Vonage's service delivers calls to a 10-digit telephone line at the center which does not allow delivery of callback number and location information.
Other limits... (Score:2)
1. Extended phone calls must be made with a series of 4 minute calls.
2. The service will require a dialup line, and won't be available by TCP/IP over an existing ethernet connection until later.
3. All conversations with people you haven't spoken with in the past must begin in a conference call. Please have your gender, age and availability ready to answer questions from other people on the call.
4. When on a call, you won't be a
Re:Emergency services (Score:2)
meanwhile, in Canada (Score:5, Informative)
Impossible to implement! (Score:5, Funny)
In other news... (Score:1)
VoIP is very popular... (Score:1, Insightful)
I'm wondering if regular phone companies have "the fear" or not... they should!
These articles forget to mention, however, that latency (jitter) is very important for VoIP QoS.
Are AOL and others going to shape their traffic in order to put their own VoIP traffic before the others?
If not, how do they expect to meet the QoS requirements?
latency != jitter (Score:3, Informative)
Latency is not generally a problem. Cell phone services tend to have rather heavy latency. Typically you don't even notice latency up to about 500 to 600 ms.
Jitter can be a problem if out of order packets aren't dealt with properly, that is, in most cases, they should be discarded, or more precisely, the longer they have been overdue the more likely they should be discarded for VoIP.
However, there are c
Re:latency != jitter (Score:1)
Re:latency != jitter (Score:2)
The term latency is usually understood to mean as much as "constant delay" and the term jitter as much as "rapidly varying delay" to put it in very broad terms.
I am not sure if a load balancing router is the only thing that could cause jitter. It may well be that multi threaded packet processing on some router along the way might also cause jitter.
Re:latency != jitter (Score:2)
Isn't jitter really the variability in arrival times of packets? In other words, assuming 10 ms packets, and assuming 6 packets (A thru F) with a 1/2 second latency you might see:
Already in Canada... (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.totaltalk.ca/ [totaltalk.ca]
Re:Already in Canada... (Score:1)
Canada is in North AMERICA!
Sheesh, stop thinking the U.S.A is the only America, There is North America, Central America, and South America, All of which can be on AOL and still be considered right.
Now as for AOL UK, that to me sounds wrong, I mean we had the Boston Tea Party and that whole revolution thing, but yet they want to use some CRAPPY internet provider from here? Sometimes I think I'll never understand the Brits, but then Saturday comes and I get another episode of Doctor W
Re:Already in Canada... (Score:1)
AOL in the U.S. has it too (Score:2)
It's the same company, and will be the same service. It's now just pointed/marketed towards AOL users and I'm guessing a few DSL users too. (I've got to add that I hate Time Warner after getting cable. I've only had it for 2 months, but their whole purpose for having a cable tv business is to put Time Warner commercials 25 hours a day! I've already got the service, quit trying to make me a fanboy.)
And 911 calls? (Score:3, Insightful)
Doesn't VoIP have issues with 911 calls. I know they can be resolved but I don't see anything in the article about this. Will the average AOL user be aware of the problem? I somehow doubt it as the AOL user base is not known for it technical awareness.
All the bells and whistles will be great until the first time the house catches fire, dad has a heart attack, or there's bad guys in the cellar!
Re:And 911 calls? (Score:2)
Re:And 911 calls? (Score:2)
How about this -- look up the phone number to your fire department and police department. Post the numbers next to the phone. In case of emergency, dial the appropriate number. It's what we did before we had 911 service.
If you just can't live without 911, get an old cell phone and use it to dial 911. No contract required.
Re:And 911 calls? (Score:1)
Or get a cheap RadioShack phone and plug it into the wall. Traditional telcos are required to provide 911 service without a contract, IIRC.
what is the 911 problem - power? (Score:2)
Re:what is the 911 problem - power? (Score:1)
What about keywords? (Score:5, Funny)
Free Forever? (Score:5, Interesting)
About 3 years ago I loaded up an AOL free trial CD just for shits and giggles, and to see how much it had changed since I last used it (1.0). Well, I found the experience disappointing (as I expected though) and at the end of the trial went to cancel.
What happened at that point was a 30min conversation where the sales rep practically begged me to keep the service. He offered me 6 months free and told me that if I make this same call every 5-6 months I could end up not paying for the service ever again. I think I said "No, just cancel the damn account, I DO NOT LIKE THE SERVICE" about two dozen times. Finally, defeated, the rep canceled the account. That was the most painful phone convo I've ever had.
I'm wondering if I can pull the free-forever scheme with their VoIP service. Think they'll be desperate enough for subscribers to it?
Re:Free Forever? (Score:2)
My main gripe was that the service kept randomly disconnecting me, completely independent of whether I was active or not. And changing dial-up numbers made no difference. This was probably related to their effort to keep to their "no busy signal" pledge.
Sure, no busy signals, but randomly disconnecting is as bad or worse.
Re:Free Forever? (Score:2)
-- do you go to movies you know you won't like and sit through them until the bitter end?
-- do you listen to prerecorded telemarketing messages all the way through when they ring through on your telephone, then c
Hot damn! (Score:4, Funny)
Does this mean we'll see a bunch of new unsecured wireless APs soon?
Re:Hot damn! (Score:2)
You can be pretty sure it won't be a decent US Robotics or Linksys, but will be a rebranded far-eastern Safecom or similar.
Wow, OSS beat our the commercial Version (Score:3, Interesting)
Test your connection... (Score:4, Interesting)
Also you can roll your own with the Asterix software, and some cheap hardware... (URL:http://asterix.org/ [asterix.org]). There are companies who you can pay to bridge to the phone network calls from an Asterix server.
-ben
It's Asterisk, not Asterix (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Test your connection... (Score:1)
Aww, c'mon (Score:2)
Re:Test your connection... (Score:1)
Here is a working link for www.testyourvoip.com [testyourvoip.com] just incase some people don't feel like highlighting the proper part of that URL and pasting it in their browser.
Only 40 cities? Why not everywhere? (Score:3, Interesting)
For what it's worth, my vonage line is my home office line, so I've even been known to travel with it when I want to work from my college friend's house. Just plug it in to their cable modem, then plug it in to a phone. Ultimate portability.
Re:Only 40 cities? Why not everywhere? (Score:2)
I have been a Vonage customer over a year and hoping that they will add Knoxville,Tn.
Let me know when they have service for the 865 area code.
Another Movie?? (Score:2, Funny)
Hhhmmm.... (Score:3, Funny)
Excellent! Everyone in their neighbourhood will be getting free VoIP as well then!
Open Access Points (Score:1)
Call Me Paranoid but (Score:3, Interesting)
I am probably giving them more credit than they are due but knowing that much about 40+ million people cannot be good...
Re:Call Me Paranoid but (Score:1)
Hmmm... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:1)
Just an extension of a current feature (Score:1)
What will happen? (Score:1)
It seems like VoIP will become more and more commonplace. I predict it will maybe be used about 50% or 75% of the telephone system by about 2010.
AOL VOIP = Good (Score:2, Informative)
Their basic is 19.95 for 3 months,34.95 thereafter (Score:2)
Is there any voip service in canada that can really save you money over traditional local service?
When I see less than 5 bucks savings I think it's not worth the hassle. Plus the headaches of qos, e911 etc, it's gotta be worthwhile to switch.
Does anybody know if this is open or proprietary? (Score:2)
Re:Does anybody know if this is open or proprietar (Score:1)
Re:Does anybody know if this is open or proprietar (Score:3, Interesting)
If they use SIP for the last mile, that would mean you could use your own SIP phone to connect to the network. I am kind of skeptical about AOL using a standard protocol, though.
Them and every-damn-body else! (Score:1)
When a company can patch a network line straight into my brain, then I'll be interested...Oh...Hi, Sony...What's that?...You're working on it?...You want me to test it out?...Ummm, maybe that's not such a good ideeee0a1a10a01a101010101101010110101010100101010 1 01010010101010010101010010101010101010101010100101 01010101010101.
Free wireless access point for AOLers? Wheeeeee! (Score:2, Funny)
I think the bigger story here is that AOL's clueless subscribers will unwittingly be rolling out a national, free, wireless IP network-- if the wireless AP is unsecured out of the box and enough people sign up for this service.
This is good... (Score:2, Interesting)
Then we'll see RIAA vs. the people all over again (Save me the "Copyright is theft" rant).
I'm keeping me fingers crossed, but experience tells me this is going to be a massive legal mess.
Speakeasy Too (Score:3, Interesting)
If memory serves me correctly, and I do believe it does, a phone jack that doesn't have service has to, by law, provide 911 service. So if you were concerned about the 911 service from... whoever... you could get a red bat-phone style phone and plug it into a wall jack in case you ever need to make that emergency call.
It's too expensive.... (Score:2, Informative)
The actual Press Release (Score:2, Informative)
*picks up phone after being gone for awhile* (Score:2)
Re:AOL (Score:3, Funny)
How fitting, considering most AOL users are only slightly more advanced than trained monkeys. And on the bright side, if you get this service you can look forward to koreans calling you at 4 AM asking you if you want a larger penis or herbal cialis.
The Nigerian VoIP Spam ought to be really interesting, especially if it comes with sounds effects like machine gun fire in the background.
I doubt anyone gets porn VoIP spam, though - people wouldn't ha
Re:Skype? (Score:1)
VOIP != computer phone (Score:4, Informative)
VOIP doesn't mean that your computer becomes a phone. All it means is that voice is encapsulated into IP packets. Period.
In fact, a software that allows you to use your computer as a phone, a so called softphone is a very bad compromise.
You will always get far superior quality if you use a real VOIP phone, that is, a device that looks just like an old fashioned telephone, but instead of a phone jack (RJ-11) it has got an ethernet jack (RJ-45) at its back and circuitry to convert between analog voice and IP packet encapsulated digitised voice.
http://www.voip-info.org/wiki-VOIP+Phones [voip-info.org]
Re:VOIP != computer phone (Score:1)
Re:superior quality? (Score:2)
The short explanation is that IP phones are made for one sole purpose only and they are very good at fulfilling that purpose, while desktop computers are multi-purpose machines optimised for time sharing, not real-time apps like telephony.
BTW, Skype uses the ILBC codec only. It cannot negotiate other codecs if the circumstances allow or require it. ILBC is OK, but it's inferior to both uncompressed codecs such as G711 (aka aLaw and uLaw) and other compressed ones s
Re:Open source (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Interesting Acronym (Score:1)
AOLIPS
Eh yo lips!