Archive for the ‘voip’ Category

What voip providers allow you to keep your existing phone number?

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

I really wanted to use magicJack because it seems easy enough and I’ve heard so much about it, but it’s been over 1 to 2 years since they promised to offer the ability to keep your phone number…and they still haven’t.

Anyone have any recommendations for a voip that is easy to install, has great call quality, no problems with emergency calls (911 can locate you immediately), etc.?

I have the MJ, but so far you can not port your number and I wont be anytime soon!

Almost all other VoIP providers will port your number!

I use Packet8 for many years now and really like it! and yes I called E911 several times already! My town is wired for E911. Many of my neighbors work from home and have VoIP and the MJ….I really can not tell you who is the best, because with VoIP….it either works or not….nothing in between…!

its the law now that cell and VoIP provider have to port your number!

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How are Skype out and other VOIP calls routed?

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

How does the call get from the public Internet onto the telephone network? Does Skype (and the other VOIP operators) own equipment in each country to provide the interface? Where is it situated, in each telephone exchange, or centrally?
Mali, the question concerned calls that go from the internet to land phones.

I believe your assumption is correct.
That seems to be the only real way to get onto the PSTN network. There probably has to be an Internet VoIP to PSTN gateway box situated at each local area exchange (or they rent one from the local exchange, the same as they rent the DID phone numbers and then re-market the numbers to users).

This is probably why SkypeIN is not available in all countries or all area codes. I live in Canada and we cannot get SkypeIN number in Canada yet (I've asked them numerous times in past years). I have had one in USA though.

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How can I prevent my Voip phone to be bugged?

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

If my Voip phone is bugged how can I destroy the bug and prevent it of happening again?

Not likely it is bugged. The phone it's self you can look at and see if it has a bug (roaches??) on it, under it or in it. The service is pretty much "bug proof" unless you are on a wireless router. If so, then ANYONE with the equipment and the motivation, can LEGALLY listen in. They can not, however, repeat any portion of the conversation. There are laws regarding listening to cordless conversations and what you can do with the information, but the "air ways" are still free. There are also encryption methods that can be used to get better security on Voip services.

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Yahoo VoIP STUN

Monday, February 9th, 2009

(Yahoo talk about VoIP) - kilka slow nt. VoIP od Yahoo. Material dostarczyl serwis Aviaa.com [ http://www.aviaa.com ]

Duration : 0:4:14

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How to increase quality of VOIP calls while uploading/downloading?

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

We have Time Warner Cable, and Vonage phone. When we are uploading/downloading something on the internet (we own a home-based design business, so this happens often), the quality of our calls is horrible (sometimes not even able to use the phone).

What (if anything) would fix this? A higher speed internet connection? Or should we look at switching to a phone line that is not VOIP?

Thanks!

It's the nature of the beast…

VoIP,email,web browsing, downloading files, videos, music, etc are all competing for the same limited bandwidth space.
Combine all that with the fact that many ISP's don't always truly deliver the bandwidth they promise and now that big data pipe becomes a narrow pipe trying to squeeze at that data through at the same time.

1) Buy the fastest service you feel comfortable paying for.
But, I have heard stories where the ISP's don't always deliver all that extra bandwidth you are paying for…. so what can your do but give it a shot…

2) Of all the data services, VoIP is a "real-time" data service. It can't tolerate data bottle-necks like other data sources can. When your data pipe gets squeezed, VoIP suffers the most. VoIP can't tolerate dropped packets, or even delayed packets like other services can.

Sometimes we just can't have it all at the same time. Use discretion when you do heavy surfing and downloading. Try to make your VoIP calls during your data lulls rather than on the usage highs.

3) When you have a choice, use lower bandwidth VoIP Codec compression. Lower bandwidth, high compression Codecs are more bandwidth efficient and often provide better effeciency thant the high-qualigy Codecs.

For example, the standard high quality VoIP Codecs are:
G.711u/a (also known as PCMU/PCMA). I don't have exact figures, but typical bandwidth required for each leg of a G.711u VoIP call is about 64Kbps. But, when combined with call management bandwidth it can require up to 110Kbps… each direction. So, full duplex conversation could conceivably require about 220 Kbps. That may not sound like much for a high speed connection, but don't forget that 200+ Kbps VoIP data is competing with all the other data transfers occuring over your Internet connection.

When you have a choice, it is preferable to use a high compression Codec like G.729a. G.729a is rated somwhere around 32 Kbps bandwidth per leg (+ overhead)This Codec only uses about one-half the bandwidth of G.711u/a. So, just by using G.729a your could end up with better call quality just because your not dropping so many packets in the bottle-neck.
Most VoIP carriers will recommend you use G.729a in the name of reducing bandwidth. The difference in voice quality is minimal - and you may end up with less jitter and drop-outs.

If I recall, Vonage allows you to adjust your VoIP bandwith through your user admin web page. The feature is called "Bandwidth Saver". For the laymans sake, they just call the bandwidth settings as High, Medium, and Low (rather than confusing you with Codec standards names). In reality, your are just selecting different Codec compression algorithms. I think the low setting is something like the GSM Codec, which is basically mobile phone voice quality.
http://www.vonage.com/help.php?keyword=BandwidthSaver

4) All the above is the easy way to improve your VoIP call quality. Now for the technical side… and not so easy - QOS.

QOS - Quality of Service settings.
How to do this in detail is beyond what can be explained here.

QOS, in essence, is the prioritizazation of VoIP packets.
When many kinds of data are competing for the same space within a limited data pipe, QOS acts like the traffic cop directing the flow of traffic. With QOS, you would want to establish that VoIP devices get priority of data traffic over other data flows, like email, web, and file transfers to your PC.

The trick with QOS is that you need a router that has QOS priority features. Then you have to configure the QOS setting in the router to give the VoIP adapters "Highest Priority" over other data traffic. How this is implemented may vary from Router to Router.

Take for example, I have a Linksys WRT54G NAT/Router and a PAP2T-NA VoIP adapter (ATA). The ATA is assigned an IP Address by the router. The ATA also has a unique MAC Address. The key here is that I had to configure the WRT54G to priortize data flow to the specific IP address (and ports) as required by my ATA. Now, once QOS is correctly configured and routed, my ATA VoIP call data gets top priority over competing data on the data pipe flowing through my Router. (Some routers may be able to prioritize based on MAC address of the ATA too)

Some ATA's are combo boxes that combine the NAT/Router and a VoIP adapter in one box. The Linksys SPA2102 and SPA3102 are examples. I haven't used those boxes, so I don't know how they are set-up for QOS, by default. I would hope they give all data to the built-in ATA top priority data flow.

So, in a nut shell, that's the best advice I can give here.
Hope it helps.
(It may not solve your problems, but may give you a better understanding of whats happening, or needs to be done)

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VoIP Security Threats

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Voice over IP (VoIP) promises many benefits, but moving the phone service to an IP network can expose that service to a number of serious threats. This 10 minute podcast looks at just some of these threats.

Duration : 0:9:50

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What is the best VoIP service to phone between UK and Australia?

Monday, January 26th, 2009

I am in the UK, my mum is in Australia. I want to call her over the internet. Skype is really poor quality. She is already on a VoIP service called MyNetPhone. I would like to chat to her for free or cheap. Any ideas?

Why don't you just sign-up with MyNetPhone too?
I see that their SuperSaver plan is 0$/month.
Then you and your mother can talk to each other free using In-Network calling.

They support free In-Network calling between accounts.
Just sign-up for the SuperSave plan - Download their free Softphone and call your Mother on her MyNetPhone account number for free.

Otherwise, try Google Talk with free PC-to-PC calling. I've used it in the past and the voice quality is not bad. It is simple to install and use. All you need is a free GMail account (you and your mother both).

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I would like to educate myself about VOIP where to start?

Monday, January 19th, 2009

I come from a comms background and have a good understanding transmission protocols and a CCNA. Looking at jobs at the moment in the VOIP field. What are the key things to understand/learn with regards to VOIP?

- Be famaliar with the most commonly used Codecs, like G.711u/a, PCMU/PCMA, G.729a, GSM, etc.
- Something about the 3 primary protocols: SIP, H323, IAX.
- SIP is becomming dominant for stand-alone services and Windows based IP-PBX.
- IAX is dominant among IP-PBX Asterisk based services.
- Importance of QOS with VoIP.
- Importance of Latency, delayed and dropped packets and related issues that affect voice qualiy.
- Router issues for Port Forwarding and Triggering of SIP ports 5060-5070 and RTP ports 10,000-20,000, etc.
- NAT traversal issues and usage of STUN Servers.
- Know how to configure your own user configurable ATA's and Softphones

I'm self-taught just by doing extensive research over the Internet.
I've tested using many different VoIP services.

I downloaded user configurable softphones like the X-Lite, SJPhone, NCH Express Talk softphone, and 3CX VoIP Client from 3CX corp.
My favorite to use is the 3CX VoIP Client Softphone.

3CX also has a free down-loadable Windows based IP-PBX for learning about using IP-PBX systems.

I learned to configure my own Linksys PAP2T-NA and SPA2102-NA VoIP ATA adapters. I recommend the SPA2102-NA because it has built-in router and QOS.

Learn to configure these devices with BYOD VoIP services like InPhonex, les.net, and CallCentric. Currently, my preferred provider is CallCentric. I use them on my ATA's and Softphones.

The above should at least give you a starting point…

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SIP VoIP iPodTouch instructions

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

http://touchmods.net
FREE SIP VoIP for the iPod Touch
Release on 1.1.08

for more info visit our webpage

the touchmods-team
eok, marian, samuel

Duration : 0:1:16

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How i do i trace someone who is calling by using voip raider software ?

Monday, January 12th, 2009

I suppose, many of you would have used voip raider software. How could you trace someone who is using voip raider software for phone calls ?

They cannot easily be traced - by the average person.
But, I expect if the authorities got involved, they can trace back to the exchange that terminates the calls. Then, they will find out the calls originated from VoIP Raider. Then they will contact VoIP Raider and have them trace which of their users made the calls. So, I think it is possible, if they want to put forth the effort.

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