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 Making a VOIP Call:

Part 1 -- Soft Phones

 

There are several ways to make VOIP calls. You can sign up with a VOIP service provider and use your existing telephone equipment, or you can use a software package on your computer (sometimes called a “Soft Phone”) that allows you to connect to other computers or to landline phones.

VOIP software such as Skype or Gizmo allows you to try out VOIP without investing in extra equipment or signing a contract that ties you to a specific VOIP provider. All you need is a sound card in your computer and a headset with a microphone and headphones. You could also use an Internet telephone that plugs into the sound card or USB port on your computer. 

Getting Set Up

VOIP software seems to be the latest craze--there are at least 50 companies offering their own versions. Some of them are for specific computer platforms, but others can be used on many different computers and operating systems. They allow you to make free computer-to-computer calls, but you have to pay a small fee if you wish to connect to the regular phone networks (PSTN: Public Switched Telephone Network, also called POTS: Plain Old Telephone Service).

Until recently, the major disadvantage of computer-to-computer calls was that both parties had to have the same kind of VOIP software. The emerging standard called SIP (Session Initiation Protocol), however, allows all SIP software to interconnect. Some software does not use SIP; Skype, for example, uses a proprietary protocol and can’t connect to other types of software. Almost every software package, though, has the ability to connect with landline or cellular phones.

Soft phones can be used anywhere in the world where a broadband Internet connection is available. You can call a business associate in Asia or your cousin Charley down the street, as long as both have the proper software installed. 

Now, For Your Call

Although each VOIP software package has its own unique interface, they are all similar in function. You usually call another person on the network by typing in their user name or number. If that person is online, they will see a pop-up box alerting them that you want to talk. The other party can see who is calling and can either accept or reject the call.

Before the pop-up appears, however, there has already been communication between the 2 computers. The VOIP software has information about the speed of your Internet connection and the type of codec (translator software) that can be used to compress and decompress audio data. When a call request is made, the 2 computers negotiate which codec will be used, depending on the connection speed.

Sound Into Data

The first step in making a computer-to-computer telephone call is to convert your voice into digital data. As you speak into the microphone, it is “sampled.” This means the analog signal is divided into individual steps, each of which is given a numerical value, thus being converted to digital data. This is the same technology behind audio CDs that convert analog signals into digital data by sampling the sound 44,100 times per second.

CD-quality sound, however, is not needed for Internet telephony. Voice data can be compressed substantially and still remain understandable. For example, the single word “Hello” requires about 43 kB in CD-quality sound. Compression algorithms can bring that down to about 2 kB, and it still sounds like “Hello”!

Routing For Speed

The compressed voice data is encapsulated into data packets to be sent over the Internet. The destination of the data is encoded in each packet, but the route 1 packet takes may be completely different from other packets in the same data stream.

The Internet is made up of 1000s of routers that are responsible for delivering data efficiently. Routers have information about the data load of other routers in the network, and can use this information to determine the fastest path. The router examines the destination address of each packet and forwards it to the next router on the fastest path. In this manner, the data packet is forwarded from router to router until it reaches its destination.

Since the conditions of data paths along the Internet are constantly changing, the most efficient path for 1 data packet may not work for the next. This means that VOIP data packets probably will not arrive at their destination in the same order they were sent. The data must then be reshuffled into the proper order (each packet has a time stamp on it), but to minimize the delay between 1 person speaking and the other person hearing the voice, some of the packets may have to be dropped.

Data To Sound

The quality of the connection depends in part on how many packets are dropped. This in turn depends on the speed of the Internet connection at each end, and the general condition of the Internet pathways.

Once the data has been received, it is converted back into an analog voice signal by the Analog-to-Digital Converter on the computer’s sound card or telephone set.

About the author:
Visit http://www.voip-solutions-now.comto learn more. Ron King is a full-time researcher, writer, and web developer. Copyright 2005 Ron King. This article may be reprinted if the resource box is left intact.

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VoIP Broadband Phone Service for Home & Office

The next generation in local telephone service will most likely be dominated by the players you find below. Such names as: Packet8, SunRocket, FonVantage & Opex Internet Voice. All that is required to take advantage of these valuable services is a broadband connection (such as DSL or Cable Internet) and a computer. You can even use your current phone. These companies will send you an adapter that you will plug your phone into and then you will plug your adapter into your router (in some cases, the adapter you receive will have a built in router). Don't let the technical jargon fool you, within 5 minutes of receiving your adapter you should be up and running!

Packet8

Packet8 Freedom Broadband VoIP

One of our personal favorites! Packet8 builds their own hardware and their service resides upon the Level3 platform for stable and reliable calling. Of course, Packet8 has many more features than can be discussed here. See for yourself why we are such big fans!

  • Freedom Unlimited for Home - $19.99 per month. Unlimited USA & Canadian calling with many top features, such as Voicemail, Caller ID, 3-Way, Call Waiting and more. With this plan you can add unlimited calling to Western Europe & Asia for a monthly fee.

  • Freedom Unlimited with Videophone - $19.99 per month & get 2 videophones for only $299. Be seen as well as heard with this popular video phone service. Great for long distance relationships.

  • Virtual Office for Small & Medium-sized business. Unlimited USA & Canada, pbx-style features and much more. Only $39.99 per line. Highly recommended!

SunRocket Signature Service

SunRocket Signature Service comes packed with everything you need automatically included in the Bottom-Line Price™. With either the Monthly or Annual Edition, you get all-inclusive service without having to worry about all those extra fees. Whether you choose a monthly plan or a yearly plan, you'll get: unlimited calling within the USA and Canada, free international minutes ($3.00 per month), free extra phone number (choose a local or AnyWhere Number), two free directory assistance calls per month, over 10 built-in calling features, all the necessary equipment you need to get started... all taxes and fees are included in the SunRocket Bottom-Line Price!

  • Annual Edition for Home - just $199 per year (that's less than $17 per month)! Additional number and all taxes and fees are included in price.

  • Monthly Edition for Home - only $24.95 per month. Additional number and all taxes and fees are included in price.

fonvantage

FonVantage Quality VoIP

Discriminating consumers choose FonVantage because of its stability and reliability. No other provider backs their service with a 99.9% network uptime guarantee! FonVantage has built a nationwide NPLS backbone (carrier class network) from the ground up, which allows them control of the network your calls use, rather than you being at the whim of the Internet. FonVantage also has the most robust features list of any VoIP we've seen... check them out for yourself!

  • Unlimited Standard - $24.95 for the first month, includes Unlimited USA & Canadian calling, with large feature set, $29.95 thereafter. Standard features include 3-way calling, call waiting, caller ID, do not disturb, call forwarding plus voicemail and other great extras. Use the web portal to manage your account features.

  • Unlimited Premium - At only $34.95 for your first month, $39.95 thereafter, this is the complete broadband phone service for your busy home or home-based business. Loaded with features to give you extra functionality such as 3-way calling, caller ID, selective call acceptance and rejection, call forwarding and follow me, plus voicemail and lots more. Manage your account features with included CommPilot Call Manager™ PC dashboard and web portal. More features on FonVantage page than can be listed here.

Opex Internet Voice

Opex Internet Voice
Opex has long been a leader in communications, certainly not a newcomer, with services such as traditional long distance and prepaid cellular... now Opex brings you their Internet Voice product. There is a slightly higher start-up cost for this VoIP, but there are no agreements or early termination fees. Service is strictly month-to-month.

  • Resdential Unlimited - $24.99 with all the features you would expect and unlimited USA & Canada calling.

  • Residential Basic Plan - $14.99 with 200 minutes of long distance calling per month and features like Voicemail, Caller ID, Call Waiting, Caller ID Block, Call Transfer and 3-Way Calling.

  • Home Business Unlimited Plan - $44.99 includes unlimited calling (USA & Canada) and all the popular features.

  • Home Business Basic Plan - $34.99 with 750 long distance minutes per month and extra features like Contact Management and Call Logs.

May we suggest:

If you don't currently have broadband service, either through your cable company or local telephone provider, try our broadband search tool. By entering your phone number we can search over 40 different broadband providers in your area to give you the best possible deal. Try our broadband search engine today!

If one of the above VoIP services isn't your cup of tea, we would happily refer you to a more traditional route with companies offering local and long distance bundles for home or business, like: Trinsic, MCI, Cleartel, Blue Casa and Spectrotel. For home service click here and for business service click here.!

If you've decided you don't want to try another local service provider at this time, you may want to take advantage of our super-low long distance rates. We're not hyping them. It's the truth. We only carry the best of the best! If you don't mind programming a number into your speed dial, then we would recommend Tel3. With Tel3 you can call anywhere in the USA for just 1.9 cents per minute. If you'd rather just pick up your phone and make a call the old fashioned way, Opex LD and Pioneer are the way to go, with rates as low as 2.7 cents per minute -- and all three services have really low international rates. Not as concerned about rates, but want a robust service with a bunch of features? Then you've got to try one of Trinsic's long distance programs... still a great rate, as low as 3.9 cents per minute in-state and state-to-state, but the voice capabilities and address book are really what make this service shine! You can see and compare them all here.

 

Source: www.4PhoneCards.info

 

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