VoIP: Difference between revisions

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New page: Traditionally your telephone is connected to the telephone company (telco) over a copper pair of wires. Now, most of us have broadband internet connections to our house, and cellular telep...
 
 
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In Canada right now for example, there are SIP providers that will give you a DID (your own North American telephone number) for less than $3CDN/month, and then you pay 1.1cents CDN per minute anywhere in North America! This is surely less than you pay the telephone company.
In Canada right now for example, there are SIP providers that will give you a DID (your own North American telephone number) for less than $3CDN/month, and then you pay 1.1cents CDN per minute anywhere in North America! This is surely less than you pay the telephone company.
== Dial Plan ==
You'll often have a dial plan. In my Linksys PAP2T I've added the following at the beginning of my dial plan:
(<:1>250xxxxxxxS0|<:1250>xxxxxxxS0|
If I dial 250-xxx-xxxx it will prefix a 1. If I dial xxx-xxxx it will prefix 1-250. Replace 250 with your ANI. Handy! Full dial plan example:
(*xx|[3469]11|0|<:1>250xxxxxxxS0|<:1250>xxxxxxxS0|xxxxxxxxxxx|1900xxxxxxx!)
( Dial * number number, like *69, *95 etc. See [http://yashy.com/star.codes.html Yashy.com star codes]| 311, 411, 611, 911 | operator | If I dial 250 and then any 7 digits, add 1 and dial straight out | If I dial any 7 digits, add 1250 and dial straight out | I can dial any 11 digit combo | Don't allow 1-900 numbers to be dialled, ! means don't allow)

Latest revision as of 15:10, 7 June 2010

Traditionally your telephone is connected to the telephone company (telco) over a copper pair of wires. Now, most of us have broadband internet connections to our house, and cellular telephones, bring in a new wave of telephony options. One of the most popular is voice over IP. In order to try this out, you will need 3 things:

  1. A broadband connection with low latency
  2. A VoIP phone. This can be a softphone or a hardware voip phone, or a VoIP phone adapter.
  3. A VoIP (SIP) provider.

The advantage of going this route, is once #2 is resolved, monthly costs of a SIP provider are a fraction of the cost of traditional copper pair. The risk is that if your internet connection has issues or is down, you will have no telephone access. If you have a cellular phone for emergencies, it's probably not a big deal if VoIP calls go to voicemail because of internet issues once in a while.

In Canada right now for example, there are SIP providers that will give you a DID (your own North American telephone number) for less than $3CDN/month, and then you pay 1.1cents CDN per minute anywhere in North America! This is surely less than you pay the telephone company.



Dial Plan

You'll often have a dial plan. In my Linksys PAP2T I've added the following at the beginning of my dial plan:

(<:1>250xxxxxxxS0|<:1250>xxxxxxxS0|

If I dial 250-xxx-xxxx it will prefix a 1. If I dial xxx-xxxx it will prefix 1-250. Replace 250 with your ANI. Handy! Full dial plan example:

(*xx|[3469]11|0|<:1>250xxxxxxxS0|<:1250>xxxxxxxS0|xxxxxxxxxxx|1900xxxxxxx!)

( Dial * number number, like *69, *95 etc. See Yashy.com star codes| 311, 411, 611, 911 | operator | If I dial 250 and then any 7 digits, add 1 and dial straight out | If I dial any 7 digits, add 1250 and dial straight out | I can dial any 11 digit combo | Don't allow 1-900 numbers to be dialled, ! means don't allow)