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Thread: Skype again
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21st October 2006, 11:47 AM #16
Got the sipme up & running, bought a $35 Voip phone yesterday, cheapy but works. Mic is a little faint, have jacked the level up to max & will try for a couple of days, otherwise will return & swap for a Logitech headset.
Takes about 50sec to a minute from clicking the number & hitting dial, to the number actually ringing. Is this typical? I'm using the voip phone per above with x-lite softphone software. Connection is 512k broadband.
Cheers..........Sean
The beatings will continue until morale improves.
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22nd October 2006, 01:07 AM #17
For cheap international calls, just purchase a 'Go Bananas" calling card. NZ. USA. UK, Canada and most of Europe is just 2c/min + call connection of 20c.
Les
Ps. Happy happy birthday to all having a birthday. You know who you are.
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22nd October 2006, 01:37 AM #18Intermediate Member
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The only problem with skype is that it doesn't play well with others. Just about all other internet call services are based on the sip protocol while skype has it own proprietory protocol.
Whay does it mean? With other than skype as a provider, you can mix and match. I have accounts with four different voip providers, and my voip telephone adaptor is programmed with all of them, and with the rules I chose for which one to use for each type of call. All the providers I've chosen have "no monthly fee" fee options, so I don't pay anything until I actually make a call.
When I dial a mobile number, the adaptor routes the call through Koala Telecom who charge me 19c per minute by the second. (Eg 10 sec call = 3.16c charge)
When I make a quick call to a fixed phone line, the adaptor routes the call through Pennytel, who charge me 2c a minute by the second to any fixed line phone in Australia.
If I'm calling a fixed phone, and I know the call will take more than five minutes, I prefix #5 to the number, and the adaptor routes the call through SipMe who charge a flat rate 9.9c no matter how long the call is to anywhere in Australia
And because I have accounts with 4 different providers (my adaptor allows up to 5), if I'm calling someone on any of these networks, I prefix the network number, and get the call completely for free. One of my providers even gives me 100 free text messages to any mobile in Australia every month!
I don't do international calls, but there are prices starting from 0.9c a minute with no connection charge. I even saw one provider offering 15 minutes free to Hong Kong if that was your want.
All this works from my normal phone, even if the computer is off. And if the network goes down, the phone automatically reverts to using the normal phone line instead.
It's a sweet system, and as others have already said, as soon as I can ditch the tel$tra line, I'll be even happier!
Regards,
Glen
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22nd October 2006, 01:56 AM #19
Glen, welcome
What ATA are you using? Sounds the goods.
Cheers................Sean
The beatings will continue until morale improves.
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22nd October 2006, 09:18 AM #20
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22nd October 2006, 10:01 AM #21Intermediate Member
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- Nairne, SA
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I'm using a Sipura/Linksys SPA3000 (there are two of them, but the only differance is the case - same machine inside). It is the most feature rich system I've ever seen - but be warned that this is a two edged sword. Because there is SO MUCH that can be configured, its real easy to inadvertently muck something up...
Most common problem is echo on the line at one end or the other which is fixable, but involves precise setting of not one but four different amplifiers.
It has heaps of other features as well (which I don't use), like the ability to bridge voip and pstn calls. Eg. If I'm out and about and need to make an std or isd call, I could grab the nearest payphone, ring home for a local call cost, enter my pin when the ata answers, and then dial the number I want, and the ata makes the call via voip and bridges it to the payphone I'm on! Unfortunately, I haven't figured out how to solve the conflict between this function, and my bog standard answering machine - so its not enabled at the moment/ It can do the same thing in reverse too - receive a call via voip, and with proper authorisation, bridge it to the phone line to make a local call.
There is just too much to play with on this thing
Regards,
Glen
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22nd October 2006, 11:58 AM #22
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22nd October 2006, 12:49 PM #23
One other question guys. How much is the hardware ? Is it worth buying or does it take 5 years of calls to recoup the initial cost?
And can i use my normal cordless phones?If at first you don't succeed, give something else a go. Life is far too short to waste time trying.
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22nd October 2006, 06:58 PM #24Intermediate Member
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Just did a quick search, and current hardware cost seems to be between about $120 and $190 for the SPA3000..
http://www.shopbot.com.au/p-15304.html
I have mine plugged into a standard dect cordless phone. I have heard some say that the cordless, and the wireless router (if you have one) can interfere with each other, but mine are sitting only a couple of inches apart and I've had no trouble.
As for connection time, there are a number of separate issues, but 50 seconds is WAY too long. The device you use, whatever it is, has to have some way of knowing when you have finished dialing. With a pots phone (plain old telephone system), the exchange is getting each number as you dial it, and connects you once it has a valid number to work with - ignoring any additional digits you dial after it has a hit on a valid number format.
Different hardware can be set up differently, but a common theme is to assume you have finished dialing after you haven't pressed any more digits for "X" seconds (X usually adjustable). So it may well be that your soft phone gets the digits from your usb phone and waits for a while before processing the number, then there will be the further delay required to establish a connection with the voip provider, for them to patch it through to the pstn, and finally for the recipients exchange to start ringing.
I know with my ata hardware, there is a special code to put into the dial plan which signifies "if you have a match - ring now and don't wait for any more digits". For example, if the first three digits are all zeros (000), then dial 000 immediately through the normal phone line and don't wait for anything else. On the other hand, if you don't recognise what is being dialed, wait until 10 seconds after the last digit, then send it to the default provider and see what happens. The trick to speeding up dialing in this case, is to try and anticipate every kind (pattern) of number you're ever likely to dial, and have an entry in the plan specifically for it, followed by the "dial now" code.
On average, I guess I wait about 5 second to hear a ring signal after hiting the send button on the cordless.
Regards,
Glen
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22nd October 2006, 07:09 PM #25
So it's a question of how long before you get the initial outlay back in savings.
If those voip boxes are to follow the same path as all other technology, they should be half the price by early next year and free by about July.
It might be worth waiting. I don't use my landline all that ofter (no friends to ring )
If at first you don't succeed, give something else a go. Life is far too short to waste time trying.
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23rd October 2006, 12:09 AM #26Intermediate Member
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My guess is they will remain static for a while, then vanish all together. This kind of functionality will become more and more generic, and we will end up forgetting that phones didn't have voip capability built in all along.
In the mean time, the capital cost for me comes out of a budget marked "hobby", and the running costs from another marked "expences". If I can have fun setting up and experimenting with something that going to save me running costs as well, I guess that's a double bonus
Regards,
Glen
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26th October 2006, 03:35 PM #27
One word of warning for you VOIP users....on some VOIP phones you cant make calls to emergency numbers. Certainly the case out here on this oil rig here in NZ where we're running USB VOIP handsets tied in to company LAN. USB handsets sold here have warnings to that effect on the handset. Worth checking this one out with your VOIP provider
Whatever note you blow youre never more than a semitone away from the correct one....(Miles Davis)
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26th October 2006, 03:40 PM #28Whatever note you blow youre never more than a semitone away from the correct one....(Miles Davis)
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26th October 2006, 07:34 PM #29Intermediate Member
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- Oct 2006
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- Nairne, SA
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Quite correct.
Most providers reccomend you have a "non-voip" service available as a backup (either landline or mobile). Many will actually allow you to make a connection to the emergency number, but can't pass on your phone number / location to emergency services as is automatically done if you call from a normal phone.
Some telephone adaptors (such as my spa3000 for instance), also have a connection to the normal phone system, so it can be programmed to patch emergency calls to the normal phone in any case...
Glen
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26th October 2006, 09:01 PM #30
Got the delay thing sorted, after a fair bit of forum reading (whirlpool & others) it seemed that SIPME's primary & secondary DNS server addys were needed.
Emailed their support, they gave me the addys, keyed it into my network connection & bingo!
6 odd seconds to connect
It's a heap more usable now
Cheers...............Sean
The beatings will continue until morale improves.
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