By Jaclyn Hurley


Small business VOIP phone systems have the benefit of not having the disadvantages which are so familiar to mobile operator clients. The often manifested fluctuating deterioration in sound quality your cell provider experiences is a thing as forgotten as the dinosaurs, when it comes to Voice Over IP. Internet lines typically have a very large spare capacity, plus Internet calling often has a set "right of way", so it is always preferred over other data in Vancouver, BC.

The reason for the lower price is quite simple. Mobile operators had to build their expensive and expansive networks (laying wires, building transmission stations, etc.). Meanwhile, the VOIP operator uses an already existing network, called (you guessed it) "the Internet". Their costs are so much lower and therefore their prices are far cheaper.

Of course, no technology is foolproof, but with Internet telephony, the answer is simple: its reliability depends on the reliability of your Internet connection. If the quality is good (which today, with the vast majority of standard connections being ADSL or cable TV lines), outages are very rare and, moreover, usually only very short (seconds or fractions of seconds). Only in the case of obscure and low-quality Internet connections, will can be met with less reliability.

Software is available either for free directly from the service provider, or you can download free-ware or paid products from a number of sites dedicated to such technology. As with the hardware solution, it is necessary to set the login parameters. The computer must also be connected to a sufficiently fast Internet line.

Your providers will tell you that to make phone calls over the Internet, you require a computer. This malicious falsehood is used by representatives of all non-Internet operators today, despite the fact that such a thing was never true, except in the prehistoric times of phone calls over the Internet. What you need is an Internet connection, and not even an Internet "socket"; you can use the Internet "in the air", ie using wireless (WI-FI, etc.) networks.

The technology is a digital service and therefore goes about converting analog signals to digital on the side of one party and the opposite conversion from digital to analogue telephony with the other party. This transfer is done via codecs. They are clearly predefined and approved procedures on how to convert analog audio to digital.

Codecs are available in large variety, but it is not this function that could affect the actual end user. Selection is carried out by the service provider and the end user then selects only one or the other codec. Once the provider has have digitized the signal, you should be able to use the transmission with ease.

These codecs used by Voice Over IP provides have significantly less compression and thus the distortion of the call is minimized. The tinny sound familiar from mobile calls to you is non- existent with phone calls over the Internet! When one calls over the Internet, there is also far less risk of overcrowding the lines, something you will have experienced on a cellphone over the festive season.




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