Should you ditch your landline for an Internet phone?
By
Melanie Chambers Bankrate.com
When Kathleen Hamilton's sister moved to Mexico, she
turned to voice-over-Internet-protocol (VOIP) technology to keep
in touch by phone and keep her long-distance bills low at the same
time. "I paid nothing to receive her calls," says the
Montreal-based Hamilton, who used Skype software for $2 a month.
Hamilton has joined the band of Canadians catching
on to VOIP, a flexible and cheap way to make phone calls that uses
an Internet connection instead of a traditional phone line. According
to a study conducted for AOL Canada by Maritz Research, about one
in 12 Canadians currently uses VOIP technology or is considering
it.
It was the low cost that drew Hamilton in, but
since Skype kept her chained to her desk during a call, since she
has to use her computer, and the amount of static she hears during
calls was increasing, she has gone back to using her old landline
service after only six months.
But Skype is only one version of VOIP. To learn more
about other VOIP services and decide if it's worth ditching your
traditional landline, read on.
How it works
VOIP is a fancy name for technology that allows your Internet connection
to act as a telephone line -- audio analog signals are transmitted
into digital data over the Internet. Instead of a physical landline
tower transmitting the call, your broadband becomes the carrier.
Just as it doesn't cost anything to send email, you
can use VOIP software to make free calls using a computer equipped
with a microphone and speakers or a headset. There are more and
more free software packages available, including Skype, that are
free to use as long as the receiver and sender use the same software.
However, if you're looking at getting ride of your
landline all together, a more reliable option is to pay for VOIP
service from a cable company or private distributor, which will
send you an analog converter and/or a VOIP phone that removes the
static often encountered when using free software and frees you
from having to sit in front of your computer. Services you pay for
also include customer support, which is typically not offered with
free software.
Cheap and flexible
Price is the biggest allure to disconnecting your landline and using
VOIP service. "I was paying hundreds of dollars each month
in long-distance coverage," says Julia Rosien, of Kitchener,
Ontario, who recently switched to VOIP pioneer Vonage for only $40
after rebates. "I (now) have unlimited North American calling
for $35 a month."
In many cases, VOIP services let you enjoy your cheap
rates even when you aren't at home. Many companies allow you to
hook up your laptop or VOIP telephone into a high-speed outlet overseas
and make calls back home at your local rate.
Emergency service a gamble
One of the big complaints about VOIP service is static. Free software,
such as Skype and MSN Messenger, are often prone to bad reception,
and Rosien says using VOIP on a cell phone can also produce some
static.
A more important issue is the ability to dial 911
for emergency assistance. If users don't register their home addresses
with their VOIP providers, their 911 calls are routed to a national
switchboard. The operator then reroutes the call to the appropriate
local 911 service -- a potentially long process when you're in an
emergency. And, if there's a power outage, VOIP service, including
the ability to dial 911, ceases to work. So, having a landline connection
or a cellular phone in addition to your VOIP service is a smart
idea.
Comparing packages
To use VOIP service, users must have a high-speed Internet connection
and, in most cases, live near a major urban centre. Installation
can be tricky depending on your level of technical know-how. Vonage
customers have to set up their own systems, while Rogers, Videotron
and Shaw send a technician to your house to set it up for you.
To avoid hours of installation frustration, Mark Evans,
a senior technology reporter for the National Post, based in Toronto,
suggests buying a cordless telephone with multiple handsets: "it
gets you around [needing] multiple phone jacks."
There are a number of VOIP providers and packages
to choose from these days. Industry veteran Vonage offers a basic
unlimited North American package that costs $40 a month plus a $58
activation fee. At any time, you can go online and easily configure
a number of special features, including choosing a phone number
from multiple area codes, which allows you to register a Toronto
area code even if you live in Calgary. This way, all Toronto calls
are considered local.
Or, you can opt to send your voicemail to your email
and check your messages online. Vonage also offers free calls between
Vonage customers, so if you buy a second adapter and send it to
a friend in Singapore, your calls are free; it's a service most
cable companies do not offer. But, while Vonage offers a number
of unique features, Evans warns that the company rates low on customer
service and sound quality.
Primus Talkbroadband, one of Evans's top picks, offers
an unlimited calling bundle for $29.95 a month, which includes 18
calling features and no activation fees. (The service is not available
in Nunavut, the Yukon or the Northwest Territories.) Primus offers
similar features as Vonage, but some will cost you. For instance,
picking another area code is $4 a month.
New to the VOIP block, Bell has a $40 package for
its Ontario customers, called digital voice lite, that offers 1,200
minutes of North American calls. Activation is free for existing
Bell customers, while new ones will pay $55. Long-distance charges
after the 1,200 minutes cost seven cents a minute, which sounds
a lot like your old landline, doesn't it? For nationwide service,
Bell digital voice offers unlimited North American calling for $43
a month.
Rogers Internet Phone Service's offerings are also
reminiscent of a regular phone service: the first feature is $4
and another $2 for each additional feature. Five features and basic
unlimited service costs $31.95 a month, plus an activation fee of
$75 fee.
AOL Canada offers an easy to install service, but
at $29.95 for the first three months then $39.95 for 1,000 minutes
of long distance in North America, it's pricey. And if you want
VOIP features such as optional area codes and international use
when abroad, it will cost you extra.
The bottom line
At the end of the day, each customer must decide whether having
no phone when the power goes out and putting up with static-filled
calls is worth the cheap rates of most VOIP services. While they
may not be worth giving up your landline for at this time, the free
software VOIP services in particular may still be a useful way to
cut your long-distance bills when chatting with friends or family,
even if you aren't prepared to switch over completely.
Melanie Chambers is a freelance
writer based in London, Ontario.
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