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Wednesday Links: MagicJack

Source: www.voip-news.com

It got rave reviews when I wrote about it a few months back. But is MagicJack misleading with their advertising? Thomas Howe says so. Read it here.

VoIP News of the UK reports that 3CX has upgraded their VoIP System. Read it here.

VoIP Watch reports that Skype has been updated on Windows Mobile. Read it here.

Published on August 6th, 2008 under , ,

Wednesday Links: MagicJack, VoIP Failures

Source: www.voip-news.com

Last time I wrote about MagicJack on here, it prompted a storm of positive responses. But Fierce VoIP wrote a critical look at the MagicJack service that has a lot of good points. Read it here.

Max Telecom has launched Comverse’s Voice solution . . . read it on the UK’s VoIP News.

The VoIP Weblog has an interesting post on where VoIP fails. Read it here.

Published on June 12th, 2008 under , , , ,

ComputerWorld Hearts magicJack

Source: www.voip-news.com

I was really surprised by all the feedback I got after mentioning magicJack on the VoIP News Blog recently. It sounds like there are a lot of very loyal and happy users out there!

Well, ComputerWorld tested magicJack this week and I wanted to share a bit of the story. (Click here to go.)

Here’s a snippet:

The softphone interface is pretty good, recording all incoming and outgoing numbers, allowing you to select the location to associate with 911 calls, switch between using a handset and the PC’s microphone and speakers, and so on.

The call quality was excellent — several people I dialed commented on how “live” the connection sounded. I experienced a few setup issues, but given that my PCs are home to a bizarre collection of software, I might have been pushing the envelope of compatibility somewhat.

Looks like you all have a friend in your court!

Published on April 16th, 2008 under , , ,

A free bridge from Skype to phone

Source: goebel.net

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Do you remember my blog post "A SIP address for Skype? Better the other way around!"? This mission has now been accomplished. As of yesterday you can call me on Skype and I will answer this call on my desk phone or cell phone using SIP VoIP telephony. As I always try to achieve, this is a totally free solution.

I have joined Voxeo’s developer program for their Evolution application, a visual design tool for interactive voice response (IVR) systems. Part of the deal is that you get a strange phone number with a +990 country code. There is no country associated with this code and Skype users can call these numbers for free. My Skype account is now being forwarded over Voxeo to a SIP address from Gizmo Project which I manage on Voxalot to make use of it’s call connection rules and voice mail.

Have a peek on my settings:

A better explanation can be found at the Voxeo support forum. I wonder what VOIPSA’s Dan York would say. In January he started a discussion with his blog post "Skype says "No" to VoIP interoperability - *because customers aren’t asking for it!* - Well, I am!". He is, by the way, working for Voxeo and this partly solution for his problem comes from his own company. So I guess he was always aware of this trick.

I am happy now that people can call me with Skype and I don’t have to keep me computer running or buy a special Skype phone for this purpose. That’s the reason why I nearly never used Skype. I don’t like applications which keep me tied to my computer in order to receive messages or phone calls, like Skype or the MagicJack normally do. Let’s see which other solutions I can develop with Voxeo. Their visual tool makes the design of VoiceXML fairly easy.

Published on March 30th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , ,

MagicJack makes VoIP simple and affordable

Source: voipcentral.org

magicjack

It is magic of the MagicJack that can change your PC into a VoIP hub using which you can make very inexpensive local as well as long-distance calls.

The magic device looks like a matchbox and works like a phone jack for the PC enabling both residential and business enterprises plug in their existing phones to make cheap local and long-distance calls.

Unlike Skype and other popular VoIP start ups, MagicJack does not require any headphone to be attached to your PCs for VoIP services. It provides a number of services such as call waiting, 911 service, conference calling and voice mail. It has a FollowMe feature that forwards calls to other phone numbers when a person is offline.

The price of MagicJack is around $40. The company provides one subscription to YMax’s phone service those who purchase MagicJack. YMax phone service brings a personal phone number, 911 service and voice mail services to the customers. They can also enjoy free International calling to US/Canada numbers when traveling outside of the US.

As of now, the MagicJack supports Windows XP and Vista operating system. The company will soon launch its Mac version.

Image with Story :

Published on September 30th, 2007 under , ,

The MagicJack doesn’t seem magic to me

Source: goebel.net

At the VoIP Weblog and in GigaOM’s VoIP sections they talk a about a new VoIP device, called the MagicJack, which caused me some trouble this weekend. The device is by far not as appealing to me as to the others, and so I got some criticism in GigaOM’s comment section. Paul Kapustka describes the MagicJack in his blog post MagicJack, Simpler VoIP than Skype? like this:

According to the just-live MagicJack website, the main magic appears to be an oversized-looking thumb-drive thingy with a USB connector on one end, and an analog phone jack on the other. Greenbergs column says the total price for a device and a yearly subscription for all-you-can-eat dialing in the U.S. and Canada should be between $50 and $60 $29 and $39 the first year, $19.99 a year thereafter; so far, no other details have surfaced on how the pricing, connection and billing actually work, and whether it wont be another free-calling fiasco.

I directly checked the MagicJack’s website for more details and was disappointed. What is so great about that MagicJack? I dont see a breaktrough. It lets people make phone calls only while their computer is switched on. When its off they cannot even receive calls. The MagicJack is basically a softphone on a USB stick, bundled with a $60 dollar a year VoIP contract. - That seems quite expensive and uncomfortable to me.

E. g. with the VoIP provider Voipstunt I have unlimited calls to USA, Canada, Germany, UK and other 30 countries - for about 36 dollars a year (= 10 Euros for 120 days). I have Voipstunt installed on my analog telephony adapter (Fritz!Box), which connects my normal phone to my DSL connection. This means that I can make those VoIP calls and receive calls when my computer is switched off. Its works like normal PSTN telephony, but is much cheaper.

I am really not impressed by this MagicJack. It seems as uncomfortable as Skype to me, which annoys me much because it works only when my computer is switched on. Maybe they want to address clients which dont understand VoIP. But to me it seems too uncomfortable and its contract too expensive. Looking for solutions from abroad the USA they would have found much better and cheaper solutions, for instance the one I use: Fritz!Box + Voipstunt from Germany. A reader called Andrew Jed answered:

Didnt anyone listen or read?!
The initial cost will be $30 - $40 for the magicJack devicewith FREE unlimited local and long distance calls - through your analog phone (or headset on PC if your prefer). No subscription or fees the first year whatsoever. Each addl year is planned at around $20.00.
And? What is so great about that? For about $40 I get one year of unlimited local and long distance calls as well, as I explained before. And I dont even have to switch on my computer to make them. So the MagicJack would worsen my situation if I would change my at home configuration for it.
PLUS you can have your entire home wirelessly making FREE calls.

And so what? Thats what I do already with my configuration. I have a DECT phone connected to my Fritz!Box that lets me wirelessly do free phone calls without the need to switch my computer in.

There is so much more. Making rash and unfounded comments prior to knowing the facts seems very, well, wrong - to say the least. Markus Gbel states in his web site he is a journalist?

Well, thanks for Andrew’s appreciation of journalism as a profession. But maybe he doesnt know: Even journalists can make mistakes. Moreover in this very case none of his arguments convinces me and I still think that I am right with every word I wrote in my comment.

Also I wrote an answer to a comment from Dan Borislow, the inventor of the MagicJack:

What makes the magicJack so different?

1.Ease of use.There is no other device in the world,where you plug into a USB,up and running in a minute with plug and play and you plug in a telephone.This is one of a kind.

Well I have already read about many similar USB stick devices that plug into a computer and then people can start talking via VoIP, without the need to install a software: Vonage V-Phone, MPlat FlashPhone or Sandisks Skype on a USB stick. OK, with the MagicJack you dont need a headset but you can use your normal phone for the call. But is this really a breaktrough? When my computer is runnig and I am talking to a friend I just speak directly into my computer, which has a great microphone and sound with echo cancelation. For what would I need to pick up the phone that is connected to the MagicJack?

Borislow answered with some ironic comments:

When you went to go to in your backyard and swig down some Becks,do you bring your laptop outside with all those songbirds and talk to your favorite girl?

Thats exactly what I dont like to do: Grab my laptop just to make a phone call. There is a device thats called telephone. You dont have to boot it. You can take it to the backyard and make phone calls. Only that it is easier to use as a laptop, weighs less and is just as mobile because I use a wireless phone. This phone is connected to my WLAN-Router/VoIP device (Fritz!Box) so that I have calls to 30 countries for free. I find this much more comfortable as the MagicJack.

What happened when you were finally making time with your girl, and Voip!Stunts only server caught on fire and she might have hooked up with somebody else by the time they restored their service? (we have 31 we use)

That was a better point from Borislow! I agree that Voipstunt can possibliy dissapear from one day to another. They are obviously underpricing. But the recent outage because of the fire was the first I experienced in two years and lasted only 4 hours. Too short to even sell this news to the media! Voipstunt is a very no frills service. They are just cheap and I dont know if they give any kind of support. But for me they failed only 4 hours in two years.

Were you surprised when you started getting billed 13 cents a call,when the Voip!Stunt promo was over after 120 days?

Thats never happening. When the 120 days are over the countries I call cost about 1 Cent. I just dont miss the 120 days. When there is no money anymore on my Voipstunt account the phone does not work anymore. In this case I have 9 other VoIP providers installed in my Fritz!Box (as fallback options and also because I a am a geek who tries out all the VoIP services). But normally I do a quick Paypal to Voipstunt and a minute later I can go on making phone calls.

Lastly, Fritz!Box told me that it is impossible to use Voip!stunt softphone on it. How did you do it.

Well I dont know to whom Borislow talked and what is his technical background. But I suppose he knows how easy it is to configure a VoIP device like the Fritz!Box. You just have to type Voipstunts login name, password, registrar, proxy-Server and STUN server into Fritz!Box built in website and yet you can do the first phone call. This takes about 1 minute. Its not impossible to use Voipstunt on a Fritz!Box. I do it every day. As well I use Sipgate, GMX, Tpad, Ekiga, Gizmo Project, FWD and others on the same device. As I said I try to check all of the interesting VoIP services.

I like the VoIP industry very much and see it with the eyes of a client. To me and to my buddies the most appealing point is to save money. VoIP should work like a PSTN telephony but cheaper. Just pick up the phone and make a call.

So the MagicJack misses the point. It shouldn’t be connected to the USB port of a running computer, but directly to the DSL modem or the router. It could easily get it’s energy from the router’s Ethernet port. The entire phone software should be embedded in the device and not rely on the Windows XP of a computer. In this case people could make VoIP calls that feel like real telephony. They could connect their old phones directly to the internet.

But in this case the MagicJack would be some kind of Fritz!Box.

Published on March 12th, 2007 under , , , , , , , ,

MagicJack, Simpler VoIP than Skype?

Source: gigaom.com

Who says the TED conference is only about movie stars and old basketball players? According to MarketWatch columnist Herb Greenberg, TED will be the official launching pad for MagicJack, a USB-based VoIP offering from telecom vet Dan (Tel-Save) Borislow that could make Skype’s simple setup look like calculus.

According to the just-live MagicJack website, the main “magic” appears to be an oversized-looking thumb-drive thingy with a USB connector on one end, and an analog phone jack on the other. Greenberg’s column says the total price for a device and a yearly subscription for all-you-can-eat dialing in the U.S. and Canada should be between $50 and $60 $29 and $39 the first year, $19.99 a year thereafter; so far, no other details have surfaced on how the pricing, connection and billing actually work, and whether it won’t be another free-calling fiasco.


Asking whether it could be a Skype-killer, like Greenberg does, is pure linkbait — at $50-60 $29-39 for the first year, $19.99 per year thereafter plus international charges, ain’t no way that’s gonna beat free, especially since millions of folks have found Skype plenty simple and already have it installed. But is MagicJack the type of innovation that should have communications conglomerators like Cisco, Microsoft and Avaya worried? Much more likely, but that doesn’t fit as nicely in a headline.

UPDATE 1: Pricing info from Greenberg column corrected throughout.

UPDATE 2: See some additional info from Borislow in comments.

Hat tip to IP Democracy for the link.

Published on March 9th, 2007 under , ,

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