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Compare VoIP Rates and Ratings at My VoIP Provider [VoIP]

Posted in VOIP (January 16, 2008 at 6:25 pm)

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Need to make a long, long, long-distance call but don’t want to pay the cost of a cheap lunch every minute? My VoIP Provider might be a good place to start looking for cheap internet-based calling options. The site offers rates and customer reviews for roughly 1400 VoIP services around the world, and can display and sort calling rates between nearly any two countries. You’ll always want to dig around a bit before signing up with an unknown VoIP service, of course, but it’s a handy way to get even cheaper phone calls than with standard call-out services. My VoIP Provider is a free service that doesn’t seem to require a sign-up. Check out a handy roundup of the numerous VoIP tips and tricks we’ve previously featured to get more out of your internet calling.


iPod touch gets microphone for VoIP via modded dongle

Posted in Apple, VOIP (January 2, 2008 at 11:37 pm)

Filed under: Handhelds, Portable Audio, Portable Video

Now that the startling mystery of VoIP has been cracked wide open on the iPod touch, it was only a matter of time before other, related mysteries were broken apart and inspected. One such case involves the process of getting the sound of your voice into the formerly-audio-out-only device, which must be accomplished via the use of some type of audio-in microphone dongle, which now — thanks to one clever man — has been hacked for VoIP-on-touch purposes. Using the hideous, yet cheap, Macally iVoiceIII audio recorder add-on for 5G iPods, and the simple soldering of a jumper to the board, you can be chatting away like a madman (provided you’ve got some WiFi) on your touch. Check the read link for the simple steps, and get ready to stick it to the man (his name is Mr. Steve Jobs, by the way) once again.

 

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Skype coming to Sony’s PSP?

Posted in VOIP ( at 11:37 pm)

Filed under: Gaming, Handhelds

Guess what babies? All your wildest dreams are about to come true (provided they don’t get too wild). That’s right, according to new PR for Sony’s upcoming CES showing, Skype is apparently coming to the PSP. Details are scarce at the moment (i.e., nonexistent), but the company makes clear mention of a Skype client for the handheld game system on its CES 2008 promo site, which is pretty official — though we’re gonna hold our breath a little till we see a press release. Obviously, we’ll be hearing a lot more about this when the big show kicks off this month, but until then at least we can all sleep a little better at night knowing the PSP is about to get yet another succulent function. Just hit the read link and click on the controller icon, all you need to know is listed in the sidebar.

Update: Thanks to some sleuthing by the crew over at UberGizmo, a perverse and exciting little easter egg has been found in the PSP promo video which accompanies this new info. For literally one frame, Sony all but confirms Skype on the handheld with a nearly-subliminal image that reads “Make calls with Skype.” Check the image after the break and see for yourself.

[Thanks, Jorge H]

Continue reading Skype coming to Sony’s PSP?

 

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Touchmods SIP VoIP client for iPod touch is out tonight

Posted in Apple, VOIP (January 1, 2008 at 11:29 pm)

Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video, Networking

Got an iPod touch? And some audio input hardware? Want to make some VoIP calls? If you answered yes to all of the above, you’ll want to check out the Touchmods site later tonight, when they’ll supposedly be releasing their full-on SIP client for the touch. Hopefully by now it’s a little more prettied up than the last time we saw the thing above. If those last videos are anything to go by, though, it looks like it will be.

 

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iPod touch SIP-VoIP application videoed in action

Posted in VOIP (December 31, 2007 at 10:47 pm)

Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video

Sure, there’s less than 24 hours before everyone and their grandmother can hop online and grab ‘hold of the SIP-VoIP application, but if you won’t be bothered with it unless there’s proof that it works, you’re in the right place. The crafty folks over at touch mods have videoed “the first VoIP call” made with an iPod touch, the aforementioned software and their own microphone appendage. Granted, the dialogue is about as uninteresting as it gets, but trust us, that’s not what’s important here. Check out a couple of in-action videos after the jump.

[Thanks, Tyler]

Continue reading iPod touch SIP-VoIP application videoed in action

 

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ZDNet 2007: What the tag cloud tells us

Our engineering team put ZDNet blogs through a cloud tag blender to render a weighted list of top topics for 2008. In an age when the consumer and enterprise worlds are colliding (but no exploding), Google, iPhone, Apple and Microsoft captured the big buzz of the year in our blogs. It was also a year […]

iPod touch SIP-VoIP application: free on New Year’s Day

Posted in VOIP ( at 12:21 am)
Remember that VoIP hack for the iPod touch. Right, the one that requires an external mic. Well, mark your calendars Jailbreakers, the software will be available for download on New Year’s Day. SIP-VoIP is free, but your donations will gladly (and rightfully) be accepted.

[Thanks, RadicalxEdward]

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Web-calling Wars: T-Mobile, Vonage, ooma Get Ready for Combat

Posted in VOIP (August 7, 2007 at 11:59 pm)

Competition in Web-calling services is heating up again: T-Mobile appears to be readying its own brand of VoIP calling. That’s bad news for Vonage, which reported its second-quarter earnings today.

Vonage: Has the bleeding stopped?

Posted in General, VOIP, Vonage (July 31, 2007 at 6:45 am)

Vonage reported its second quarter earnings Thursday and there were plenty of negatives. However, there were a few reasons to have a little optimism.
The emphasis here is on little. In no way should you run out and buy Vonage shares, unlike some folks that are driving VG up 11 percent right now.
Vonage reported […]

Free Internet phone calls

Posted in Gadgets, VOIP, Vonage (July 30, 2007 at 9:26 am)

Ooma_box

David Pogue in today’s New York Times tells how to get free or low-cost Internet phone calls. Excerpt:

The price of home phone service has dropped 30 percent since 1999.
Surely, say the analysts, that trend line will eventually plummet all
the way to zero. Surely, thanks to the Internet’s ability to carry your
voice, landline phone calls will soon be free.

Already, dozens of calling services promise to slash your
residential phone bill by exploiting the Internet. And yet nobody has
yet delivered the holy grail: free calling, to any phone number, from
your regular telephone. There’s always a catch.

For example,
programs like Skype offer unlimited free calls — but not from your
phone. You and your conversation partner have to sit at your computers
wearing headsets, like nerds.

Then there are those annoyingly named VoIP services (voice over Internet protocol), like Vonage.
You plug both your broadband Internet modem and your existing phone
handset into an adapter box. Presto: unlimited domestic calls from your
regular phone.

But they’re not free. You pay about $25 a month,
and you hope that your VoIP company won’t suddenly go under, as
SunRocket did last month.

If you’re still forking over $60 or
$70 a month for residential phone service, here’s a guide to some newer
Internet-calling options.

iCall.com. The promise: Free calls to domestic phone numbers.

The
catch: Your friends pick up their phones to answer, but you still have
to sit at your computer. In other words, iCall removes only half the
drawbacks of Skype.

People can also call you from their phones
(iCall assigns you a number, with an extension). But here again, you
have to take calls at your computer, not your phone.

Jajah.com.
The promise: Unlimited free calls to anyone else who’s signed up for a
free Jajah account in the United States, Canada or 35 other countries.
You use your regular phone. There’s no special equipment, contract,
monthly fees or prepayment.

The catch: You don’t talk on your computer — but you need a Web browser to initiate calls. You begin at jajah.com — or, if you have a Treo, BlackBerry or iPhone, at mobile.jajah.com. There, you type in both your phone number and the one you’re calling.

In
about 10 seconds, weird as this sounds, your phone rings: the Jajah Web
site has called both of you, connecting the call from the middle. It
works reliably and the voice quality is good, but having to place calls
from a Web site is a hassle.

The “free calls to Jajah members”
part gets a little complicated, too. The calls are free to both
landlines and cellphones in the United States and Canada, but calls to
overseas members are free only to landlines, and then only in 35
countries (in Europe, parts of South America, plus Australia, Israel,
Japan and Taiwan and others).

When you’re not calling a Jajah member, overseas calls can be  very cheap: how’s 3 cents a minute to England or China?

Calls
to some other countries can still hurt, though. Afghanistan is 26 cents
a minute. Greenland, 50 cents. Cuba — gulp — 86 cents.

And
those are landline prices. Calls to overseas cellphones often cost
five, six or seven times as much. That’s too bad, considering how many
people outside the United States use only cellphones.

The price of home phone service has dropped 30 percent since 1999.
Surely, say the analysts, that trend line will eventually plummet all
the way to zero. Surely, thanks to the Internet’s ability to carry your
voice, landline phone calls will soon be free.T-Mobile. Its new HotSpot@Home cellphones
make unlimited free calls whenever you’re in a wireless hot spot — or
when you’re at home, since a free home Wi-Fi router comes with the
deal. Calls you place to numbers in the United States from overseas hot
spots are free, too.

The catch: Your voice plan costs an
additional $10 a month. Only two bare-bones phone models are available
for this program, although more are on the way.

The free calls
are available only in hot spots that don’t require a login in a Web
browser. (The exceptions: Calls are free from any of T-Mobile’s 8,500
commercial hot spots in the United States — coffee shops and so on.) …

The piece also covers PhoneGnome and Ooma (pictured above). Per usual, the Web-unfriendly Times does a sloppy job linking to some of the websites it’s writing about.

ooma: First Thoughts

Posted in VOIP (July 22, 2007 at 7:00 pm)

I’ve been testing ooma, a piece of equipment offering free long-distance for life, for the past week. Here are my initial thoughts.