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AT&T Will Continue To Make Special Concessions on Pricing for U-verse. TimeWarner Offers Me $100 to Switch. Here’s What I Did

Source: alanweinkrantz.typepad.com

My $99 per month U-verse  plan that gives me the whole enchilada of the U-verse 400 package, 6 MB of Internet and U-verse Voice is expiring in mid-June.  TimeWarner in my market is offering something similar, but not quite as extensive at $99 per month.  Plus TimeWarner will give me a $100 rebate to switch, minus the $40 installation fee, giving me a net rebate of $60 per month.

Having made several calls over the last week, I did manage to negotiate the following:

Everything stays the same, but with the following modifications.

 They offered to keep the plan at $99 if I agreed to go to the U-200 plan.  That meant losing Showtime, HBO and a few other movie channels.  I can do without most of the movie channels, but I really do like HBO.  

The friendly customer service person offered me HBO at $14.95 per month.  I said no.   He countered with $5.00 per month.  I said yes. 

My landline service still costs $25 per month, and I am still on the fence about it.  That’s $300 per year for service I hardly use.  I could use that money to buy a Kindle or just save it.  I kept the land line, but am inclined to kill it.  

For now, I have won a small victory.  What was going to go back to costing me $179 per month, will now cost me $104 per month – minus of course a few movie channels I can live with out.

I have a video that I am making the tracks the conversations with AT&T which I will try to post this week.

I still believe that AT&T offers a better and more comprehensive service than TimeWarner does.  I just was not prepared to pay a massive premium.  

Stay tuned.

Published on May 26th, 2009 under , , , , ,

Wednesday Links: Did Vonage Screw Up?

Source: www.voip-news.com

VoIP Watch wonders if Vonage just screwed up when Verizon sued it. After all, Cox won the lawsuit that Verizon filed against its company. Read it here.

Smith on VoIP has some speculative thoughts about why Microsoft has restored VoIP to its messenger service. Read it here.

EMC has a live webcast coming on Oct. 31 on Smarts VoIP Performance Manager.

Published on October 9th, 2008 under Object id #91

Cox Didn’t Violate Verizon Patents

Source: www.voip-news.com

A Federal jury ruled today that Cox didn’t infringe on Verizon’s patents. Verizon had sued the competing company earlier this year, after winning a similar lawsuit against Vonage.

No such luck this time.

Verizon isn’t sure if they will appeal and drag the whole thing out further …

According to Information World:

Cox hailed the decision and said it looks forward “to competing vigorously with Verizon in the marketplace, not in the courtroom.” Among other arguments, cable provider Cox had said its cable calling service isn’t routed over the public Internet.

In the aftermath of the decision, Verizon said it hadn’t decided whether it would appeal the decision. Verizon isn’t a major provider of VoIP services, although its Verizon Voice Wing VoIP FiOS service utilizes the IP technology.

Published on October 7th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

Where Did My Hotspot Go?

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

Some silly views are making their way around the ‘Net about the decline of the hotspot due to 3G.

I don’t think so. Neither does the best expert on the subject, Glenn Fleishman whose WiFi Net News would be akin to being the VoIPWatch of WiFi in my view.

For starters WiFi is much less expensive. Second any IP connection can be turned into a hotspot. Third, people shouldn’t let the mismanaged Earthlink (and other) Muni Wireless effort cloud their thinking. There are many successful public WiFi initiatives and more importantly, the private ones being undertaken by T-Mobile, AT&T, Boingo, Orange (France), BT and the Cloud in the UK, etc. are not running away in fear.

3G is a very good fill in the gaps, or go where no WiFi technology is, but until the next level of HSUPA comes along for real, and until the use of Proxying technology is taken out of EvDO here in the USA, users won’t really experience 3G right, and not for a low price. Data plans remain highly priced while WiFi plans are available for under $20.00 a month. While you sacrifice anywhere for somewhere, you do get coffee and a smile versus the scowl of the driver next to you on the highway.

Published on March 11th, 2008 under , , ,

It Was A Graveyard Smash…We Did The Monster Mash

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

The other day Alec Saunders organized a very imaginative conference call using the iotum Conference Call engine that is powering the free conference calling system that works inside of FaceBook.

On the call were Thomas "Mr. Mashup" Howe, Jim Courtney, Alec and yours’ truly. It was a smash and you can listen as well as get Alec’s thoughts right here.

Published on January 12th, 2008 under

Deltathree expands to Canada

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

NEW YORK, Oct. 29, 2007 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) — deltathree, Inc., a leading provider of SIP-based Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) solutions for service providers and consumers worldwide, today announced that it will be offering Canadian inbound phone numbers, otherwise known as direct inward dialing (DID) numbers, to its reseller, service provider and direct-to-consumer clients. deltathree’s ability to provide 9-1-1 services in Canada was made possible by its long-standing partnership with Intrado, the core provider of North America’s 9-1-1 emergency communications network. Per the regulations of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, all VoIP subscribers in the country with the ability to make and receive calls must be equipped with 9-1-1 service. Therefore, with this new 9-1-1 capability deltathree is able to expand its inbound calling offers to include Canada.

"We are excited to be offering Canadian inbound phone numbers to our clients," stated Yaron Globus, deltathree’s Vice President of Operations. "Our initiative with Intrado further defines our commitment to serve the North American market with innovative VoIP services that are in accordance to regional regulations. Clients are now empowered with yet another element of deltathree’s service with which to grow their businesses and personal relationships."

deltathree was an early adopter of Intrado’s 9-1-1 services in the United States, and continues to lead the industry as one of the first VoIP service providers to utilize its emergency services in Canada. This new initiative with Intrado emphasizes deltathree’s ongoing focus on public policy and safety measures when launching new services to its clients.

deltathree’s Reseller and Hosted Consumer VoIP Solution clients will now be able to further develop their businesses in North America with of the ability to utilize Canadian DID numbers. Customers of joip, deltathree’s newly formed consumer brand that powers the VoIP services of Panasonic’s new GLOBARANGE hybrid phone, can now have Canadian inbound phone numbers to stay closer to their friends and family in the country. GLOBARANGE phone owners automatically become part of the global joip community, where members can call each other around the world for free. A joip user can also obtain an inbound phone number representative of the region where most of his or her family and friends live. In this manner, friends and family outside of the joip community can call the joip user locally, giving them significant cost savings while allowing the joip user yet another way to strengthen relationships.

www.deltathree.com

Published on October 29th, 2007 under , , , , ,

Global Crossing Expands VoIP Local Service to Mexico and to 21 Counties in The USA

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

FLORHAM PARK, N.J., Oct. 25 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Global Crossing , a leading global IP solutions provider, today announced it has once again broadened the scope and reach of its Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) services for customers around the world by extending its Global Crossing VoIP Local Service(TM) to 16 major metropolitan cities in Mexico and nearly 400 additional cities in the United States. The addition of Mexico brings to 21 the total number of countries worldwide where the service is offered. In the U.S., the company expanded availability of VoIP Local Service to nearly 400 additional cities, including Las Vegas, Salt Lake City, and Tucson, bringing that total to more than 1,400 nationwide.

Initially, Global Crossing will be serving 16 metropolitan markets in Mexico with VoIP Local Service, including Mexico City, Guadalajara, Puebla, Leon and Monterrey. Global Crossing VoIP Local Service also is available in Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Peru, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States. A complementary offer, Global Crossing VoIP Outbound(TM), is available from 29 countries around the world and provides the consistency customers require from global services.

"Mexico is an important growth market for Global Crossing, and customers are clamoring for convenient, feature-rich local VoIP services," said Al DiGabriele, vice president of network applications services. "Global Crossing continues to expand the reach of this critical capability into key markets across the world. We’ll continue to use our secure, reliable global IP network to support multinational customers — and the carriers that serve them — in need of these essential business applications."

"The geographic expansion of Global Crossing VoIP Local Service in the U.S. and Mexico further demonstrates Global Crossing’s strong position as a global VoIP provider to both the carrier and enterprise market," stated Will Stofega, senior analyst at IDC. "We’re still at the tip of the iceberg with the uptake of VoIP services in this market of projected double-digit growth."

IDC estimates 63 percent growth from 2005 to 2011 in IP trunking services in the U.S. market, which is indicative of the significant growth opportunities across the various categories of carrier and enterprise VoIP services.

Global Crossing VoIP Local Service is an inbound local service that provides nationwide Direct Inward Dialing/Direct Dial Inward functionality through a single IP interconnection. The service lets customers originate traffic on the public switched telephone network in different countries. Traffic is then converted to VoIP on Global Crossing’s network and delivered to the customer’s IP network. VoIP Local Service also can eliminate traditional time division multiplexing, private line and foreign exchange service fees by providing a single IP connection to serve multiple markets.

Global Crossing’s global, fully meshed MPLS-based network ensures that VoIP calls are delivered with minimal latency, packet loss and jitter — a consistent and predictable call quality not possible with voice services based on public Internet transport. More than 1.3 billion IP interconnected minutes per quarter are processed on Global Crossing’s voice backbone network, or VoIP core. This represents a 73 percent year-over-year increase from the third quarter of 2006 to the same period in 2007. IP interconnected minutes now represent 21 percent of total minutes on Global Crossing’s VoIP backbone.

“VoIP Phone Business in a Box” gets new tools

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

Talkfree International VoIP reseller, has added two new tools to its centerpiece product, the “VoIP Phone Business in a Box.” The first tool, the “Inbound Telephone Numbers” program, arms TalkFree business customers and service resellers with a new service using Direct Inward Dial numbers (DID) from nearly 40 countries.
According to the press release by TalkFree, here are the benefits of the “Inbound Telephone Numbers” program include:

* Customers are given a “host” or “local” in-countryphone number
* A customer’s clients and business associates in that country dial the “host number” at local or in-country rates.
* The call is then forwarded anywhere in the world using VoIP technology and bypasses international long distance rates.

The second TalkFree tool being added is a completely new and improved “Call Shop Management” software solution. This tool provides call shops with the flexibility to establish rates and margins separate from the wholesale VoIP rate charge. In addition the program delivers to the call shop real-time visual tracking of every call in progress and, at the same time, allows customers to view displays monitoring their actual communication time. An additional but significant feature of the program is the option to bill for calls less than 40 seconds in duration. “Call Shop Management” also offers one other ultimate convenience for the call shop and for the caller: the receipt. Each receipt is printed immediately and displays only the call shop’s independently set rate in the local currency.
Press release also mentions that VoIP TalkFree is focused entirely on the Emerging World and promotes social entrepreneurship through the creation of small telecommunication businesses. The company is one of the top international VoIP reseller enablers, and is composed of a diverse team of people with a profound knowledge of the countries they serve.

Links;
Talkfree VOIP in a BOX

Voxbone joines Stealth Communications’ Voice Peering Fabric

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

According to DBusiness news, Voxbone is a member of the Stealth Communications Voice Peering Fabric now. The Voxbone’s ever growing coverage should take a further jump after joining the VPF.
As a VPF member, Voxbone can now interconnect with carriers and enterprise to buy, sell and peer DID/termination services across a private network. Additionally, through the use of the VPF ENUM Registry, Voxbone can now send and receive calls with VPF members directly, completely bypassing the public telephone network and the public Internet.
“We are committed to providing our customers with the highest levels of service quality combined with highly competitive pricing,” said Rodrigue Ullens, co-founder of Voxbone. “Joining the VPF is consistent with both of these goals.”

Voxbone leases international VoIP virtual phone numbers and worldwide origination services via VoIP to organizations in North and South America, Europe and Asia/Pacific regions. It delivers high-quality call origination and provides the global infrastructure that enables its customers to expand to international markets quickly and efficiently. Using either direct inbound dial (DID) or virtual numbers from Voxbone, for example, customers may receive inexpensive, locally dialed phone calls from 50 countries and 4,000 cities throughout the world.

Links;
DBusiness News
Voxbone News

Published on December 5th, 2006 under , , , , ,

Voxbone Adds Support for Asterisk’s IAX Trunking

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

According to a Businesswire news release, VoxBone now supports Asterisk’s IAX Trunking.
Voxbone, a provider of international VoIP origination services to carriers, ITSPs, calling card operators, call centers and other businesses, announced at Astricon 2006 support for Inter-Asterisk eXchange protocol (IAX) trunking services.
IAX, a signalling protocol from Digium, is used to enable VoIP connections between Asterisk servers, and between servers and clients that also use the IAX protocol. In addition to IAX, Voxbone already supports SIP trunking services, providing customers with a choice of standards to meet their particular needs.

Voxbone leases international VoIP virtual phone numbers and worldwide origination services via VoIP to organizations in North and South America, Europe and Asia/Pacific regions. It delivers high-quality call origination and provides the global infrastructure that enables its customers to expand to international markets quickly and efficiently. Using either direct inbound dial (DID) or virtual numbers from Voxbone, for example, customers may receive inexpensive, locally dialed phone calls from 50 countries and 4,000 cities throughout the world.

According to Rodrigue Ullens, co-founder of Voxbone, “In adding support for IAX, we are responding to strong demand from customers. IAX is completely plug and play, and optimized for Asterisk platforms. It also offers integrated security and consumes less bandwidth while offering the same high quality as SIP. Customers now have a choice of two popular standards from which they can choose"

Links;
Voxbone
ASTERISK
IAX
VOIP

Published on November 5th, 2006 under , , , , , ,

Voxbone Adds Support for Asterisk’s IAX Trunking

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

According to a Businesswire news release, VoxBone now supports Asterisk’s IAX Trunking.
Voxbone, a provider of international VoIP origination services to carriers, ITSPs, calling card operators, call centers and other businesses, announced at Astricon 2006 support for Inter-Asterisk eXchange protocol (IAX) trunking services.
IAX, a signalling protocol from Digium, is used to enable VoIP connections between Asterisk servers, and between servers and clients that also use the IAX protocol. In addition to IAX, Voxbone already supports SIP trunking services, providing customers with a choice of standards to meet their particular needs.

Voxbone leases international VoIP virtual phone numbers and worldwide origination services via VoIP to organizations in North and South America, Europe and Asia/Pacific regions. It delivers high-quality call origination and provides the global infrastructure that enables its customers to expand to international markets quickly and efficiently. Using either direct inbound dial (DID) or virtual numbers from Voxbone, for example, customers may receive inexpensive, locally dialed phone calls from 50 countries and 4,000 cities throughout the world.

According to Rodrigue Ullens, co-founder of Voxbone, “In adding support for IAX, we are responding to strong demand from customers. IAX is completely plug and play, and optimized for Asterisk platforms. It also offers integrated security and consumes less bandwidth while offering the same high quality as SIP. Customers now have a choice of two popular standards from which they can choose"

Links;
Voxbone
ASTERISK
IAX
VOIP

Published on November 5th, 2006 under , , , , , ,

Voxbone Adds Support for Asterisk’s IAX Trunking

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

According to a Businesswire news release, VoxBone now supports Asterisk’s IAX Trunking.
Voxbone, a provider of international VoIP origination services to carriers, ITSPs, calling card operators, call centers and other businesses, announced at Astricon 2006 support for Inter-Asterisk eXchange protocol (IAX) trunking services.
IAX, a signalling protocol from Digium, is used to enable VoIP connections between Asterisk servers, and between servers and clients that also use the IAX protocol. In addition to IAX, Voxbone already supports SIP trunking services, providing customers with a choice of standards to meet their particular needs.

Voxbone leases international VoIP virtual phone numbers and worldwide origination services via VoIP to organizations in North and South America, Europe and Asia/Pacific regions. It delivers high-quality call origination and provides the global infrastructure that enables its customers to expand to international markets quickly and efficiently. Using either direct inbound dial (DID) or virtual numbers from Voxbone, for example, customers may receive inexpensive, locally dialed phone calls from 50 countries and 4,000 cities throughout the world.

According to Rodrigue Ullens, co-founder of Voxbone, “In adding support for IAX, we are responding to strong demand from customers. IAX is completely plug and play, and optimized for Asterisk platforms. It also offers integrated security and consumes less bandwidth while offering the same high quality as SIP. Customers now have a choice of two popular standards from which they can choose"

Links;
Voxbone
ASTERISK
IAX
VOIP

Published on November 5th, 2006 under , , , , ,

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