The VoIP Telephone Services Revolution
Ever since the birth of the internet, entrepreneurs with an eye
to the future have predicted that voice communications --
telephone services -- would eventually be merged with internet
services. With the widespread adoption of VoIP, that day has
come, and it is causing a revolution in the telephone industry.
In simple terms, a VoIP service allows you to use your broadband
(high-speed) connection to place telephone calls over the
Internet. It is not difficult to see how this is rocking the
telecom industry to the core.
It's all about cost
Two things have made traditional telephone service providers so
powerful. Their monopoly over local telephone services, and
their traditional stranglehold on lucrative and usually
over-priced "long distance" services. Both of these captive
markets have been seriously eroded over the last few years, as
the reality of VoIP has started to sink in. In anticipation of
the revolution that is now upon us, most aspects of telephone
service have gradually been opened up to competition. Most of us
now have a choice of providers for both local and long distance
telephone service. And the biggest reason for the new
competitive environment is the recognition that the widespread
adoption of VoIP is inevitable.
The development of VoIP
VoIP has been developing slowly over the last ten years or so.
Early implementations allowed computer users to talk to each
other through their computers. This was only feasible if you had
a voice-enabled computer, a reliable and stable internet
connection, and a software program installed on your computer
that made it all work.
The advantage of this computer-to-computer communication was
that you could completely bypass the traditional telephone
system and talk to anyone in the world free of charge -- as long
as they had a similar setup to yours. But the disadvantages of
communicating this way were also obvious. You could only
communicate this way using your computer. You were completely
dependent on often unstable dial-up internet connections. And
the person at the other end of the conversation had to also be
"online" with a voice-enabled computer.
Today's VoIP has solved these problems
Today's versions of VoIP have left these problems in the past.
Two things were required to make VoIP technology feasible on a
large scale basis, and both of these things have now been
realized.
First, broadband internet service has been widely adopted. This
makes it possible to have stable internet connections that are
"always on". Second, the industry has developed a simple,
inexpensive method of integrating the IP network (the internet)
with the traditional telephone system. This allows a user of
VoIP to use his or her own telephone to call anyone else in the
world who has a traditional telephone connection.
This is where we are today. As traditional telecom companies
like AT&T, Bell, Qwest, and SBC develop their own
implementations of VoIP technology the way has been opened up
for a myriad of choices for consumers. Today's VoIP allows
anyone with a broadband internet connection to place calls to
anyone with an ordinary telephone connection, anywhere in the
world.
How you save money with VoIP
The major advantages of VoIP are lower cost, and greater
flexibility with no significant decrease in voice quality.
First, a VoIP subscriber does not need a traditional phone line.
Instead, you are assigned a phone number by your VoIP provider.
Prices for these numbers can be as low as $9 usd per month.
Second, most VoIP subscribers will purchase a "bundle" of
services that includes unlimited incoming calls and unlimited
long distance calls to anyone within a defined geographic area.
For instance, VoIP unlimited calling plans to anyone in the USA
or Canada start at around $20 per month.
Third, most VoIP service providers offer free bundled features
that most traditional telephone companies charge for. These
include free voicemail, call forwarding, caller ID, call
waiting, call waiting ID, 3 way calling, speed dialing, and many
more of the services that the traditional companies are
constantly trying to sell you.
Greater flexibility and portability
Another significant advantage is the flexibility and portability
of VoIP phone service. With VoIP your personal telephone number
is programmed into the converter that acts as a bridge between
your internet connection and your regular telephone.
This has several important advantages. As already mentioned you
do not need an actual land line. Instead your telephone number
is assigned to your converter (not to your geographic land
line). So you can take your converter with you anywhere in the
world, plug it into any available broadband connection, and
immediately start using your regular number to make and receive
calls.
This flexibility also lets you choose a number in an area code
where most of your long distance calls originate. For instance,
if many of your friends, family, business associates or
customers are calling from a specific city that traditionally
involved a long distance call for them, you could choose a
number in that area code and immediately turn all their calls to
you into local (free) calls for them.
The advantages of VoIP are many, and the savings can be very
significant. So it is no wonder that VoIP has become the hottest
telecom technology of the decade. Informed consumers and
businesses around the world are adopting this technology at a
phenomenal rate.