[pianotech] voip phone lines

Dean May deanmay at pianorebuilders.com
Wed Feb 18 15:32:07 PST 2009


Phone quality is very acceptable. 

 

You can get dry loop DSL in some places through your phone company. That is
DSL service with no phone service. It is only slightly more expensive than
standard DSL service. Many people can also get high speed internet through
the cable company. Some places have wireless service available.

 

For me I had another residential phone line that carries my DSL. 

 

Dean

Dean May             cell 812.239.3359 

PianoRebuilders.com   812.235.5272 

Terre Haute IN  47802

  _____  

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of paul bruesch
Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 6:14 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] voip phone lines

 

How is your call sound quality?  I've had two different VoIP services... the
first one was spotty (and abruptly closed shop w/o notice a while after I
parted company with them in utter frustration), but my current one is quite
good... not alway quite Phone Company Quality, but usually at least very
very close. On rare occation, I do lose a connection during a long call (1/2
hour or more... not my usual customer-call-length.)

And aren't you still somewhat beholden to the Phone Company for your DSL?
(I'm on cable Internet.) 

I am going to look into your phonepower.com... that is a great deal!

Paul Bruesch
Stillwater, MN

On Wed, Feb 18, 2009 at 4:40 PM, Dean May <deanmay at pianorebuilders.com>
wrote:

Greetings all

 

I've just added a couple of voip (voice over internet protocol) phone
services and thought I'd share with you my experiences. 

 

First, I added a Magic Jack, www.magicjack.com <http://www.magicjack.com/> .
One end plugs into a USB port and the other end is an RJ11 jack for a
telephone. They advertise it as costing only $20/year, but with your initial
activation, shipping, etc the first year's cost is around $50 with each
succeeding year at $20. Since activation they have regularly offered 5 more
years for $60 which comes to only $12/year.

 

It gets you a random phone number (no porting your own number at this time).
A small drawback for me is that it does not have any local numbers for my
area, so my number shows up on caller ID as an Indianapolis exchange. It was
a little buggy to get it working on one computer but they were helpful with
live support. On my other computer it was plug and play with no problems. 

 

A big plus is the phone dialer. It has a plug in for Outlook that will dial
any contact's phone number with a single click. I also got it to work with
Act! which I just started using. I put a doubler jack into the phone end of
the Magic Jack to allow me to add a short phone cord back to my computer's
modem. This enables me to use the built in dialer in Act! which utilizes the
modem. I did have to slow down the modem dialer a little bit for the MJ
software to keep up. (Choose Properties on My Computer, pick the Hardware
tab, then Device Manager, find your modem in the list, pull up its
properties, then insert this in the advanced tab: S11=100  If that doesn't
work for you find a computer geek and they can make it happen (it's what I
did).) 

 

Another plus is you can use a headset plugged into your computer for hands
free talking. Very nice when scheduling appointments. 

 

Magic Jack is also portable. You can take it on the road with you and plug
it into your laptop and use the hotel's high speed internet access. You'll
have to take a phone with you to plug in as well.

 

 

But I really wanted to drop the regular phone company with my business line
which was costing $50/month without loosing my business number. So I hooked
up with Phone Power, www.phonepower.com <http://www.phonepower.com/> . They
are always running different specials, but I got in on $199 for 2 years of
service. With taxes and misc the total bill was about $250 for 24 months.
That is $10.50/month and they ported my business number. So I keep my number
and my vanity toll free number: 888-DEAN-MAY. It was too easy.

 

The actual Phone Power hardware is a little box smaller than a router. It
plugs in series between the DSL modem and the router. The box also has RJ11
ports for telephone lines one and two. Installation was a snap except I got
myself into trouble by getting a couple steps out of sequence. Just follow
the instructions, stupid, and it works. 

 

A very, very cool feature of the Phone Power service is that I actually got
two lines for that price, with automatic roll over. So if the first line is
busy, it will ring line two. And if I'm talking on line one, someone else
can place an independent call on line 2. To get that feature with the phone
company would have doubled my monthly costs to $100/month. 

 

Phone Power has some other very neat features. You can access voice mail
through their web site. Voice mail can also be forwarded to your email as an
attachment. You can also forward all calls to another number, which I do to
my cell phone most of the time. It also keeps a log of all incoming and
outgoing calls. It's a caller ID on steroids. 

 

The one downside by switching my business phone to Phone Power is I'm not
sure yet if I'll still get a single line listing in the Yellow Pages. I
don't rely on Yellow Pages for my business anyway. And I'll enjoy saving
$500/year ($1000 if you count line 2). 

 

Another slight downside to PP (though it won't be for me) is you are limited
to 3000 outgoing minutes/month. Unlimited incoming minutes. I'm not even
close to 3000 outgoing minutes a month so no worries. 

 

And my savings will even be more because long distance is free with both MJ
and Phone Power! 

 

I'll likely keep the MJ just because the phone dialer is so handy when I'm
making calls. It is too cheap to get rid of. 

 

Dean

Dean May             cell 812.239.3359 

PianoRebuilders.com   812.235.5272 

Terre Haute IN  47802

 

 

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