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Q&A: Why is my voice over IP phone service not clear?

Question by David L: Why is my voice over IP phone service not clear?
I use Net Zero Voice and lately I have been getting complaints that my voice is not clear. What is the deal? Is it the service? The head set that I am using? Or? What is the cost to get a converter to use a regular phone? Will this help make it more clear?

Best answer:

Answer by Randy W
No it’s the internet connection that you have.  It may provide high speed, but it’s not a reliable and steady signal.

In order for VoIP to work well you need at least a 90Kbps upload rate. That’s a sustained rate, and at that rate you are still only getting a 80% signal quality.

To test this try making a call either really later at night like after midnight or before five am in the morning.

There are some thing that you can adjust to help but 9 times out of 10 it is the connection.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

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Posted by VOIP Guy - August 12, 2011 at 2:45 pm

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Voice Over IP

Communication is one of the important things you should always have especially if you have a business. This is one of the critical things being practiced for years already. Telephone is one the thing people use to apply the concept of communication. Because of the technology is going so high many of us do create new things to make the world an easy place to live.

Did you ever heard of VoIP? Are you familiar with this? In this video, it will teach you how you can communicate using a broadband internet connection to save money on your phone bills.

The video will teach you to have better understanding for you to be aware of the new technology we have and save you time and also money. In this video, it will talk about the functions you needed to remember for you to be aware what VoIP can do to help you.

So enjoy and watch this video all about VoIP.

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Posted by Travis Koch - August 12, 2011 at 8:17 am

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what kind of phone to use with voice over ip?

Question by bayerischfrau: what kind of phone to use with voice over ip?
Can any phone be used with digital voice service that has voice over IP?

Best answer:

Answer by Cableguy
yes any standard phone

Give your answer to this question below!

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Posted by VOIP Guy - August 11, 2011 at 5:16 pm

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A Brief Prehistory of Voice over IP parts 1 & 2

Google Tech Talk August 10 & 11, 2010

ABSTRACT

Presented by Danny Cohen and Stephen Casner. This talk explores the development of interactive packet voice beginning in 1974 with experiments over the ARPAnet in the NSC (Network Speech/Secure Communication) program sponsored by ARPA, initiated by Bob Kahn. One highlight will be the showing of a movie made in 1978 to demonstrate a multi-party teleconference over the packet network, including one participant interfaced from a telephone. The talk will be presented in two sessions (two days), with the movie shown at the start of the second session. Part one covers concepts and lessons from this project: * A 1971 realtime distributed flight simulation that sparked the idea * Understanding real-time vs non-real-time communication * Digital speech and the need to compress it (PCM, DPCM, CVSD, LPC/LPC10) * Network Voice Protocol (NVP) over the ARPAnet, type0/type3 packets * The birth of the Internet with TCP * Separating IP from TCP and adding UDP * Building NVP-II on top of IP * Adding packet video (DCT based compression) Part two emphasizes the development of the voice protocols: * Introducing and showing the teleconferencing movie from 1978 * Advances in equipment and function at the end of NSC in 1982 * Progress stalled, waiting to low-cost vocoding * Development of IP Multicast and the MBone * Evolution from NVP to RTP, and RTP design philosophy * Conferencing control protocols * More recent history of VoIP Speaker Info: Danny

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Posted by VOIP Guy - August 11, 2011 at 5:11 pm

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Voice over internet protocol, The Next Stage in Verbal exchanges

Voip, The Following Action in Verbal exchanges

In this unique time of systems the world is definitely smaller as well as more competitive than it has ever been. Technological innovation has advanced to such a stage that corporations not merely remain competitive in your area but world-wide. A more compact society brings in more competition, and also competitors is a driving force with regard to innovation. As companies try to remain reasonably competitive many had to make sacrifices and even cut costs to be able to operate as successfully as probable. In the pursuit of in which a number of organizations looked at the standard overheads involved in operating an organization. Of those the the phone and also the expenditures connected with it all ended up being perceived as a thing which had to be improved.

In ’04 VoIP, or Voice of Internet Protocol, was commercialized. It was swiftly changed by technology firms and college students and has been spreading throughout the professional world. Voip has already been well received due to the fact it provides a product significantly more in comparison with regular phones and it doesn’t call for a phone collection while still being capable to do all the identical stuff a telephone are able to do for a tiny proportion of the expense. Through a broadband connection a small business or individual can make use of the same options associated with a business phone such as caller ID and voicemail plus attributes like video conferencing. Voice over internet protocol is also desired mainly because through it faxes, among various other styles of data transmissions, can easily be sent and received in an electronic format in addition to quickly which means zero busy signals or lost out on information. Voip is additionally the popular technique for young folks to speak with their friends be it all over the world as well as locally. Voice over internet protocol is rapidly becoming one of the most favored means of conversing.

As Voice over ip proceeds to develop, its quality and capabilities will quickly absolutely overshadow that of its precursor, the phone. With how convenient Voip services are to control and also the actual relatively low costs of infrastructure required putting in and managing it, Voip is getting an aspect of each day lifestyle. So effective and efficient are Voice over ip services that even large businesses such as the Social Security Administration are remodeling their buildings to employ the rewards of Voice over internet protocol. With the competitiveness of an ever downsizing world bundled with the tough financial times it would seem disadvantegous to not use and utilize the strengths of Voip and all the features it provides to personal and commercial end users.

Justin is a professional researcher and product tester based in the Phoenix, Arizona area. Justin is the owner of a successful review site for the VoIP industry. To learn more about the Best VoIP providers and Cheap VoIP providers. Please visit www.thetop10bestvoip.com

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Posted by VOIP Guy - August 11, 2011 at 4:24 am

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Voice over IP First-Step

Voice over IP First-Step

Your first step into the world of IP telephony

  • No IP telephony experience required
  • Includes clear and easily understood explanations
  • Makes learning easy 

Your first step to the world of IP telephony begins here!

  • Learn how voice and data communications merge in voice-over-IP technology
  • Use this reader-friendly guide to understand the benefits of this technology
  • Explore real-life applications and theories through case studies in every chapter

Welcome to the world of voice over IP

We use either a telephone or e-mail for much of our day-to-day communication. Today, these two worlds are merging, and companies can place phone calls over their existing data network infrastructures using a technology called voice over IP (VoIP).

 

No prior experience with VoIP technology is required

Voice over IP First-Step is anyone’s introduction to the world of VoIP networks. The concepts in this book are presented in plain language, so you don’t need in-depth background knowledge to comprehend the technologies covered. If you work with data networks, if you work with telephony networks, if you’re a home user interested in how VoIP can reduce your monthly phone bill, or if the concept of VoIP simply intrigues you, this book is for you.

 

 

List Price: $ 41.99

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Posted by VOIP Guy - August 10, 2011 at 1:13 pm

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VoIP pushes industry to HD voice

VoIP players are setting new standards in voice quality with HD codecs. Cellcos have had their own HD voice standards for years, but challenges abound, and the simpler solution could be to embrace VoIP for themselves

Television channels aren’t the only things going “high-definition” (HD) these days. Even voice calls – the traditional cash cow of the telecom sector – are moving into HD territory, particularly in the mobile sector. HD voice promises to make callers sound like they’re practically in the same room. And it’s been generating considerable buzz in the past six months.

Several HD voice solutions were on show at this year’s Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. And cellcos in the UK have been demonstrating HD voice, including 3 UK and Orange, the latter of which launched trials of HD voice in several cities with plans for a nationwide rollout. Orange also has HD voice trials ongoing in Eastern and Western Europe.

However, for the most part it’s not the traditional cellcos that are turning users onto HD voice, but upstart VoIP players – which is ironic, not least because VoIP call quality is typically portrayed as a matter of low latency. Anyone who has used Skype or similar VoIP apps knows when the call is having latency issues. However, they also know that in terms of actual voice fidelity, VoIP codecs are way ahead of the game.

Skype executives know it too and have been going out of their way to tout the value of HD voice. At the Emerging Communication Conference America earlier this year, Skype chief technology strategist Jonathan Rosenberg included a slide showing that as his company’s own SILK codec has improved in audio quality, the frequency and duration of voice calls go up.

Rosenberg said that HD voice quality can increase the length of a voice call 45% (see chart, page 20). Little wonder that Skype’s latest iPhone client, which allows Skype calls over 3G networks rather than just Wi-Fi for the first time, boasts “CD quality” voice capabilities.

Meanwhile, Google clearly sees value in HD voice. In May this year, it paid .2 million in cash for Norwegian company Global IP Solutions (GIPS), which specializes in VoIP and video processing platforms. Industry observers have speculated that Google could put GIPS’ HD voice engines to work to enable an HD version of Google Voice for its Android OS.

What’s even more ironic about VoIP’s lead in HD voice is that circuit-switched HD codec standards have been around for years. The mobile version, Adaptive Multi Rate Wideband (AMR-WB), has been an ITU standard (G.722.2) for close to a decade, as has the fixed-line version (G.722), and solutions have been commercially available since at least 2006. But deployment has been held up by a number of factors, from cost of deployment to sheer lack of incentive. After all, customers have been using standard voice codecs for ages – they’re used to it, and as long as they can understand the person on the other end, why fix what ain’t broke?

But that’s becoming less and less the case as VoIP – which claims over 900 million users, according to ABI Research – increasingly sets expectations on what voice calls ought to sound like. The trick is that the challenges that have delayed HD voice for so long for operators remain in place – so much so that (and this may be the biggest irony of all) the answer may be to embrace VoIP for themselves.

The chief factors holding up HD voice for operators boils down to a few key themes: handsets, expense and coverage.

The problem with handsets, says Ericsson CTO Michael Lee, is simple: mobile phones have to support AMR-WB for HD voice to work, and at the moment, few do.

“We haven’t seen a lot of support from the handset market to accommodate AMR-WB,” Lee says. “But to be fair, it’s also a chicken-and-egg problem. If there are few operators interested in AMR-WB, why should handset suppliers support it?”

Another issue is network investment, says Lee. “Today operators deploy transcoders in every switching site of the network, so that the 16-kbps codec I use between the mobile and the base station can convert into a 64-kbps connection to adjust for the traditional circuit-switched PCM-based voice codec,” he explains. “If you want to do AMR-WB, you have to take those transcoders away and introduce new functionality at the gateway of the architecture that handles transcoder-free operation. All this means you have to make some investment in the network.”

This factor has given VoIP players the edge over traditional operators in HD voice, says Alexander Kravchenko, marketing director for voice/video engine specialists Spirit DSP.

“Using HD voice with something like Skype doesn’t bring any additional cost to the service provider because the software is free,” he says. “For carriers, the situation is quite different because you have to install a lot of equipment.”

This isn’t necessarily the case for everyone, says ABI Research principal analyst Fritz Jordan. “Newer 3G networks – those deployed since about 2005 and 2006 – can already use the new format and require only a software update and a changeover to HD handsets,” Jordan said in a research note. “That’s why HD voice, unlike most technologies, will first find traction in developing markets,” while markets with older 3G networks will have to upgrade their networks.

However, that raises another key problem – HD voice has to be supported on both ends of the call, otherwise it drops to the default narrowband codec. And islands of HD voice support inevitably mean inconsistent service, says Lee.

“What that means for the end-user’s point of view is that sometimes you get high-quality voice and sometimes you get standard-quality, depending on whether you call someone on another network that doesn’t support HD voice, including a fixed-line phone, or someone whose handset isn’t HD-enabled,” Lee says. “It can even be an issue in cases where the operator has deployed HD voice for its 3G network but not its 2G network to cut costs.”

That’s tricky for operators, he adds, because once users try HD voice, the lower quality of narrowband becomes much more noticeable. “Once they try the high-quality, they notice when it’s lower quality and they think it sounds bad, even though it was what they were used to in the past.

A related issue with connecting HD voice islands is interoperability between the various codecs in play, from G.722 and AMR-WB to VoIP codecs like Skype’s SILK, says Jim Machi, senior VP of worldwide marketing for Dialogic.

“Interoperability is a major issue, whether it’s interoperability from HD voice-enabled networks to non-HD voice-enabled networks, or from one HD voice-enabled network to another, as well as potentially from one HD voice codec to another type,” Machi says. “There are infrastructure elements called gateways that would need to be installed to enable this. Or more appropriately said, there are gateways being installed every day in networks around the world, so we would need HD voice enabled gateways.”
The interoperability problem also includes related value-added services like voicemail, Machi adds. “If you are on an HD voice-enabled network and you want to record a voicemail, you would want to record it in HD voice format, right? So we need media servers to be HD voice enabled.”

Perhaps the biggest obstacle for enabling HD voice is the business case for it. Put simply, there isn’t one – at least not if operators see HD voice as a potential new source of premium revenue.

HD voice is a hard sell, partially because of the inability to guarantee HD connections regardless of call destination, but also because not everyone can tell the difference on first listen, says Kravchenko of Spirit DSP.

“If you play narrowband and wideband voice samples for the customer, not everyone can perceive a big difference between them right away,” he says. “It takes time for them to use it and get used to it, and only when they go back to narrowband do they hear the difference. So it’s hard to sell HD instantly. That also means that you can’t really charge more for HD voice, even for enterprise users.”

The real value for HD voice, says Ericsson’s Lee, is in two main areas: longer talk time (as championed by Skype above) and customer retention. “If the question is whether that translates to more ARPU, we see some doubt from the operators on that, and we haven’t yet seen a successful case where the operator can generate higher ARPU directly because of HD voice.”

That’s not to say there won’t be opportunities to put HD voice to use in creative value-added service bundles to differentiate themselves from the competition, says Lee.

“Take couples, for example – if you and your lover both subscribe to the same mobile operator, you can enjoy very intimate HD conversations with your partner over the phone,” he says. “For the corporate segment, you can offer HD voice to everyone in the company, which is useful for certain businesses that really require good quality voice, like stock traders, for example. You could also use it for DTMF speech recognition services.”

Interestingly, despite all the talk about HD voice and VoIP, there’s some disagreement over just how much pressure operators are under to take voice high-def.

Lee, for one, says cellcos feel more pressured by VoIP players on things like IDD tariffs rather than voice quality.

“They don’t see it as anything urgent, because the value for mobile networks still comes from mobility, and as long as customers still enjoy that mobility, mobile operators still have an advantage,” he says. “Also, they still face the same challenges now as they have in the past. So when the competition comes up from other mobile operators, they’ll move more quickly to deploy AMR-WB.”

Machi of Dialogic, however, credits increased usage of VoIP for resetting customer expectations for voice call quality.

“In the enterprise, using the latest equipment from Avaya or Microsoft or Cisco, you can get HD voice, and Skype also uses an HD voice codec,” he points out. “So people have been exposed to HD voice and know how much better it sounds.”

Either way, it’s going to take time for HD voice to catch on in the cellco world – but when it does, it’s going to ramp up fast, according to ABI Research. An April report says serious growth for mobile HD voice won’t kick in until at least 2013, but usage of HD-enabled handsets will skyrocket to 487 million subscribers by 2015.

That growth could be even faster for cellcos that are prepared to embrace VoIP for themselves, says Kravchenko.

“In the mobile space, it’s probably easier to move to HD voice by enabling VoIP,” he says. “Instead of enabling wideband voice on the traditional circuit-switched network, you can use a VoIP software app on the data network and offer it that way. It’s a way to get people to try HD voice without the expense of changing the terminals or the base stations.”

Spirit’s VoIP expert for Asia Slava Borilin adds that using VoIP as an HD enabler also makes the interoperability problem simpler to address.

“There are about five or six software codecs that you’ll typically come across in VoIP, and it’s not as difficult to get them to interoperate,” he says.

The trick there, of course, is convincing cellcos to embrace VoIP in the first place. Most operators have resisted VoIP out fears of cannibalism of existing voice or data capacity issues, and many still block usage of VoIP over their 3G networks (although Wi-Fi usage is usually still allowed). But migration to all-IP LTE could mitigate the capacity concerns, says Kravchenko.

Meanwhile, Skype has been maintaining its charm offensive with cellcos, pitching a November 2009 case study by CCS Insight showing that 3 UK’s partnership with Skype has not only lowered churn, but also boosted traditional voice and SMS usage rather than cannibalize it.

To date, only Verizon has taken Skype up on its offer to follow in 3 UK’s foodsteps. But the idea does seem to be catching on elsewhere. In July, Korean operator SK Telecom announced that it would include mobile VoIP as part of a broader updated mobile broadband strategy that includes unlimited data plans and an accelerated LTE rollout timetable.

Granted, there are caveats in place – while mobile VoIP subscribers are free to use any VoIP client they wish on SK Telecom’s data network, actual mobile VoIP usage will be metered and capped to avoid data congestion.

What’s striking is SK Telecom’s public admission that the operator’s previous objections to VoIP – that it “might act as a disincentive to carriers to make investments and hinder industrial development,” as president and CEO Jung Man-Won put it during the press conference – have been overridden by the realization that the pros of VoIP outweigh the cons.

“The introduction of m-VoIP is projected to have a negative effect on our revenues in the short term. However, we expect bigger positive effects in the mid- to long term,” Jaeeun Namgung, manager of SK Telecom’s pricing strategy team, told Telecom Asia. “It will deliver greater customer satisfaction and help us better retain our customers as we’ll be providing them with a wider range of experience and options. Also, we expect growth in our ARPU and revenues as we attract new high paying customers and as our existing users switch to higher priced plans.”

Interestingly, Namgung didn’t specifically mention HD voice as a particular benefit of mobile VoIP, focusing instead on VoIP’s inherent flexibility in terms of creating new voice apps and business models that would be too difficult to do with traditional voice.
“For instance, m-VoIP functions can be added to various applications including real-time remote lecture system, remote health-care service and  real-time games,” she said.

That said, however, the HD capabilities of voice certainly wouldn’t hurt in any of those apps or services.

Either way, analysts are tipping mobile VoIP as a major growth opportunity. Frost & Sullivan says mobile VoIP will generate .57 billion by 2015, despite ongoing resistance from cellcos. And a May report from Ovum warned cellcos that those that choose to block or avoid VoIP do so at their own risk.

“Blocking VoIP is like trying to control the tides. Most mobile operators today have attempted different means of hindering the use of VoIP, or are cautiously monitoring usage,” said Steven Hartley, principal analyst at Ovum and report co-author. “However, these approaches merely garner negative publicity from vocal early adopters demanding access.”

Telecom Asia

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