Will voIP Make the Telephone Ring?
As a large proportion of people worldwide are increasingly
favouring the Internet as a means of communicating with others,
it should come as no great surprise to see it being adapted to
encompass that other technological marvel of our age, the
telephone.
Once again, the Internet has taken another step forward in its
evolution, this time with the arrival of voIP (voice over
Internet Protocol). By using the Internet as a signal carrier,
this system allows users to make and receive free or cheap
telephone calls anywhere in the world. Whilst voIP is still in
its fairly early stages, it is however showing all the signs of
being a huge success.
Apart from a computer, there is only a minimal amount of
equipment required to access this service. Firstly, users would
have to route calls through a voIP provider, what is needed then
is a fast connection such as broadband together with a telephone
and voIP adapter and you're up and running. Calls are then made
and received in the normal way.
This latest technology whilst advancing the capability of the
Internet even more could simultaneously be signalling the onset
of a decline in conventional telecoms companies, who may find
that they will have to adapt rapidly to keep up and compete in
what could turn out to be another communications revolution.
There are at present quite a number of voIP providers already in
existence who have obviously seen the potential in this system
and taken early action to be a part of it from the outset.
Is it a possibility then that the telephone could become the
number-one method of communication again and eventually gain
superiority over email? One of the main attractions of email is
the fact that apart from the standard ISP charges it is
otherwise free to use. It is therefore hardly a shock that since
its inception email has relegated the art of letter writing to
third place with the telephone only just above it as a preferred
communication medium.
So, is all that due to change with the arrival of voIP? Will
free or cheap telephone calls compliment or outstrip email usage
in the next year or two? That remains to be seen. To the
far-sighted among us, voIP is a natural progression that was
bound to happen sooner or later. To the rest of us it is an
exciting new concept that will not cost a fortune to operate, a
benefit many will welcome with open arms.
There is however, a certain amusing irony in the fact that as
the very system that contributed to the decline in telephone
usage, the Internet could now turn out to be the biggest aid to
its revival. The constant growth and ever-increasing abilities
of the Internet has most of us asking the question, how much
further can it go? As far as our imaginations will take us,
would for the time being be as good an answer as any.
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