How to Rid Yourself of Phone Charges with Internet Phone Service
Session Initiation Protocol and Short Message Service (SIP and
SMS respectively) refer to frameworks that allow devices to
communicate directly with one another without the need for a
central routing computer. It seems rather surprising that a mere
framework can so radically change the face of communication, but
in the few years since their explosion onto the communications
world, SIP and SMS have done just that.
The brilliance of SIP and SMS is that they are able to bypass
the traditional telephony model whereby a line had to be routed
through a telephone hub and maintained for the duration of a
call to complete the conversation. The process of routing and
establishing connection as well as maintaining connectedness
throughout the call in increasingly congested phone lines is
quite an expensive venture. And like all good for profit
businesses, telephone companies were happy to pass the costs of
operation on to consumers in the form of high long-distance
bills. That has all changed, however, since the advent of SIP
and SMS.
Because the SIP and SMS code is based on computer communication
and not telephone communication, it is able to work much like
the internet itself. That means that when you place a call
through SIP or send a message through SMS you do not have to pay
the cost of a router connecting your calls, but rather the
technology automatically finds the person you are trying to
communicate with and rings their line. What is established is a
stable but temporary connection in between you and the person
you are speaking with. When you are done speaking the connection
is severed. That means that unlike traditional telephone
companies, SIP and SMS providers do not have to maintain
millions of lines that are not being used, but rather they
simply rely on the very precise code built in to the phone to
create and sever connections as needed. This creates a perfectly
efficient system, which consequently explains why SIP and SMS
providers are able to offer long-distance communication so
cheaply.
SIP and SMS were designed not only with efficiency in mind,
however, but also integrated ease of use in the model. Because
the designers were fully aware that telephone users have become
used to having a handset and phone number, this has been
integrated into the SIP technology. Under the system SIP users
can make calls from their number through a regular handset just
like they would ordinarily. However, because the system is based
on internet and not telephone line communication, the benefits
do not stop there. Rather, SIP allows users to take their phone
and plug it in wherever there is internet access. And when they
do, they can make and receive calls on their very same phone
number. So for instance, a business traveler can take his office
phone with him on a trip and receive calls to the same number,
on the very same phone, although physically he may have moved
across the country or even across the world.
The fact that the system is based on internet communication also
means that users get the benefit of paying their bill and
adjusting their services all from a single website. That is not
to mention extra services like conference calling, which is
significantly cheaper with SIP than with traditional telephony.
SIP and SMS allow users to send messages and phone calls from
around the world with the ease of making a local call. Because
the system is internet based it is able to offer a wide array of
services and features that typical providers are simply not able
to touch. But by far the most important benefit of both SIP and
SMS is the cost. Due to the fact that the system is
peer-to-peer, users are able to save tremendously on
long-distance charges over their much more costly land-line
competitors.