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Friday, January 06, 2006

Phone a Friend over Wi-Fi

A new Wi-Fi phone from Vonage is fun -- but it doesn't make sense as a replacement for the cell phone.

By Simson Garfinkel

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At this week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, at least three companies are introducing cordless phones that use a Wi-Fi connection to make calls over eBay's Skype Internet phone service (a technology sometimes known as "VoIP," for voice-over-Internet protocol).

Wireless-equipment firm Netgear and appliance makers Panasonic and Phillips all said they will bring out phones that add some measure of mobility to the experience of making a phone call over the Internet -- an activity that has, for the most part, required users to wear a headset attached to a computer with an Internet connection. Panasonic said it would also introduce a Wi-Fi phone that works with Vonage, the leading Internet telephony company.

I've been using a similar phone with Vonage's network, the UTStarcom F1000, which Vonage itself is selling for $79.99 (after a $50 rebate) plus $14.99 per month for the company's Basic 500 Plan. This small, lightweight gizmo is a lot of fun if you live and work in buildings that have Wi-Fi networks. It's also an easy way to try out the wonders of Vonage. But even though the F1000 looks like a little cell phone, it's not really practical as a replacement for that device.

With its stubby little antenna, green and red "phone" buttons, and square one-inch monochrome dot-matrix screen, the F1000 resembles a 1999-era cell phone, except that it can't transmit more than a few dozen meters. Fortunately, it doesn't need to. Like a wireless laptop, this phone uses 802.11 Wi-Fi networking technology. When you place a call, the F1000 digitizes your voice into data packets that are sent to the nearest Wi-Fi base station.

The base station then sends the packets over the Internet to Vonage, which turns the packets back into the sound of your voice and completes the phone call. Because it doesn't need as much transmission power as an ordinary cell phone, the F1000 has a battery life of two or three days, depending on how often you use it.

As a phone, the F1000 has some great features but an equal number are missing. You can use it to call any phone in the world, but it only works if you are within range of a friendly wireless network. The voice quality is a little compressed but not annoyingly so. The phone's caller-ID feature displays the caller's name or phone number, but not both. You can load the phone's 200-number memory from the call log, but not from your PC. There's a microjack to plug in a headset, but no built-in speakerphone. The phone charges with a standard mini-USB connector, but charging takes hours.

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Comments

  • Vonage vs. Skype
    Guest (Christopher Brewster) on 01/06/2006 at 8:48 AM
    Posts:
    1
    This article reads like a advertisement for Vonage rather than anything else. You do not note that Skype is significantly cheaper and easier to use. There are other DECT phones that plug into your PC and have all the advantages that this one appears to have but are cheaper in not being tied to Vonage.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Still not the right time for it.
      Guest (Julieta Rivero) on 03/13/2006 at 12:00 AM
      Posts:
      1
      Hi! I´m not sure this could be clasified as a Vonage Advertisement, because you can at first see that technology isn´t enough developed to take advantage of the great functionality of this gadget. I think it is a very nice gadget, but its only advantage over cell phones now a days is the battery that lasts a long time!!! It isn´t very explotable in places like Mexico where we still don´t have a lot of this infraestructure installed all over the country. Of course there are places where the infraestructure is installed, but definitely not everywhere. So, I think it would take a little bit more time for this technology to be profitable and we should ask ourselves if this would be the surviving technology in the future when that time arrives.
      Rate this comment: 12345
  • Havent Heard of WiMax?
    Guest (sanman) on 01/07/2006 at 5:20 AM
    Posts:
    1
    How come you havent heard of WiMax?

    http://www.tgdaily.com/2006/01/07/samsung_shows_off_wimax_notebook/

    That technology could be used in the type of internet-phone you mentioned in your article, giving it far greater range.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Great Article Isnt This Like Every Emerging Technology?
      Guest (carpeweb) on 01/07/2006 at 10:14 AM
      Posts:
      1
      Im also a Vonage customer and have been following the introduction of the wi-fi phone.  This article confirms my decision to continue waiting until the phone has some compelling features or functionality that I need or really, really want.

      Not too many people downloaded video from the web in the &quotearly days&quot, did they?  Not only was dial-up bandwidth insufficient for most, but the compression techniques, streaming, etc. werent there to support/enhance the experience.  That has changed with video, and Im sure VOIP and related technologies will evolve.

      It hasnt been too long since choosing a cell phone over a land line became a rational choice for many consumers.  I wonder how long it will be before choosing a wi-fi phone will become a rational choice for ones primary and perhaps only phone.

      Thanks again for a great article.
      Rate this comment: 12345
    • Great Article Isnt This Like Every Emerging Technology?
      Guest (carpeweb) on 01/07/2006 at 10:14 AM
      Posts:
      1
      Im also a Vonage customer and have been following the introduction of the wi-fi phone.  This article confirms my decision to continue waiting until the phone has some compelling features or functionality that I need or really, really want.

      Not too many people downloaded video from the web in the &quotearly days&quot, did they?  Not only was dial-up bandwidth insufficient for most, but the compression techniques, streaming, etc. werent there to support/enhance the experience.  That has changed with video, and Im sure VOIP and related technologies will evolve.

      It hasnt been too long since choosing a cell phone over a land line became a rational choice for many consumers.  I wonder how long it will be before choosing a wi-fi phone will become a rational choice for ones primary and perhaps only phone.

      Thanks again for a great article.
      Rate this comment: 12345
  • Vonage vs. Skype
    Guest (Christopher Brewster) on 01/06/2006 at 8:48 AM
    Posts:
    1
    This article reads like a advertisement for Vonage rather than anything else. You do not note that Skype is significantly cheaper and easier to use. There are other DECT phones that plug into your PC and have all the advantages that this one appears to have but are cheaper in not being tied to Vonage.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • Havent Heard of WiMax?
    Guest (sanman) on 01/07/2006 at 5:20 AM
    Posts:
    1
    How come you havent heard of WiMax?

    http://www.tgdaily.com/2006/01/07/samsung_shows_off_wimax_notebook/

    That technology could be used in the type of internet-phone you mentioned in your article, giving it far greater range.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • good
    Guest (jaggu) on 01/16/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    good,keep going like this,very good.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • Brand Unlock Gsm Phones, Laptops at Cheap Prices
    Guest (Telcom Co Ltd) on 05/11/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    We are wholesales in the following unlock gsm phones listed bellow, Such as Motorola, Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Samsung, Nextel, Qtek, BenQ, PDA,s,Nextel, Sidekick II,Sprint,Ipods, Laptops. They are brans new sealed in there original box with one year internation warranty. We are using this midium of time to look for an interested buyer of our phone. contact for more details.
    Scamers please do not reply to this post.
    Contact Name: Richard
    (info.telecomunication@gmail.com)
    Rate this comment: 12345
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