VoIP Allows A Technologically Advanced Alternative
To The Traditional Landlines
By Aubrie George

In an age where the Internet is beckoning today’s growing technology, phone lines
are now going online too
Voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP for short, is
joining the technological trend in switching signals from analog to digital.

With
VoIP phone services, phone calls are made over the Internet as opposed
to the landline wire services that telephones traditionally operate on. All that is
required is a
broadband Internet connection or more specifically, an Internet
connection that is provided via cable modem or any type of
high-speed
connection such as a DSL or a LAN.

If a broadband connection is available, hooking up a phone or computer to a
VoIP
service can be done. As long as a broadband connection is up and running, a
VoIP phone service is capable of running as well. If a broadband connection
exists, service may be provided to subscribers in one of three ways. A VoIP service
may be hooked up to a computer. This usually requires software and a
microphone.






VoIP
computer to computer calls generally require no fee under most
subscriptions, which makes long distance and international calling cheap.
Travelers who take their computers with them wherever they go are able to use
their VoIP services in areas where wireless Internet services exist. These areas
include airports, cafes, parks and other areas where
wireless Internet is
available. Computer users don’t have to worry about traditional cell phone issues
such as getting service or roaming and long distance charges that tend to sky-
rocket when traveling. The software installed on the computer will alert the
subscriber of incoming calls and will provide the user with special features and
options.

For those who are not so computer savvy, a special
VoIP telephone is available.
These telephones come with an
Ethernet port that is built-in and ready to plug
into a broadband Internet connection.
IP phones are portable and are generally
small. Anywhere there is a broadband connection an IP phone can be used. A
good number of
VoIP services will provide an IP phone for free with purchase of
a subscription. Those who don’t want to let go of the analog telephone can still get
VoIP service with an
Analog Telephone Adapter (an ATA). This adaptor will
make it possible to convert analog signals to digital so that phone calls can be
made over the Internet.

All VoIP products convert analog signals into digital data. A voice goes into the
telephone or microphone, is converted from analog data to
digital data and
travels over the Internet to the receiver. Don’t anticipate issues when calling not so
technologically advanced friends and family members because when a VoIP
service sends a digital signal to a regular phone number, the signal is converted
back into a regular telephone signal before it reaches the other end.

In fact, using a VoIP service via an
adaptor or IP phone is much like using a
regular telephone. It will ring just like your regular telephone always has and user
reviews say the quality is much like that of a typical landline service. The major
advantage to this new telephone technology is cost.

Most providers offer a fixed rate per month that includes local and long distance
calling regardless of time or place. Some services restrict unlimited calling to a
designated area, but when calling outside of this area calls don’t tend to cost much
extra. The general cost of calls and subscriptions is very low compared to
traditional wire services. Portability comes into play when subscribers don’t have to
pay a high extra fee for roaming and long-distance calling as they do when using
mobile phones. The packages offered by
VoIP providers often include features
that wire services don’t provide, or services that traditionally come at an extra cost.

Most VoIP services include features such as
call waiting, three way calling, etc
under their subscription plan as opposed to charging extra for them as add-ons to
the basic subscription price. You can also send data like documents and pictures,
at no extra cost.

The price of features of course varies on a service to service basis. Concern
emerges when dealing with
911 emergency calls made over VoIP connections.
VoIP 911 calls are handled differently than wire 911 calls. The origin of VoIP calls
cannot always be traced as they are with land wire emergency calls.

The
FCC’s regulations and Enhanced 911 program aim to keep VoIP users safe
and significantly lessen the concern for subscribers in a state of emergency.
Sooner or later this problem will most likely become obsolete. Some of the top VoIP
providers include
Vonage, AT&T CallVantage, Packet8 and BroadVoice. Plenty of
telephone service providers are jumping on the digital bandwagon, so more
carriers are expected to expand this way as well.

About the Author

Aubrie is a freelance writer for
Indocquent.com an online advertising medium that
allows businesses and individuals to promote their services and products in over
200 countries around the world. You can sign up for a free account by going to
http://www.Indocquent.com/freeaccount
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