VoIP Phones
VoIP Phones
VoIP Phones are the telephonic devices used for VoIP
services. It can be a normal standard analogue telephone or
the exclusive IP phones that can be used for VoIP
communications only.
If to eliminate the intermediary technicalities, both types
of phones facilitate communication by sending the
conversation as data packets over the internet to the
recipient. In other words, unlike the conventional
telephone communication, no wire transfer is made use of in
the case of VoIP.
In fact, this is the biggest advantage of VoIP phones.
Since there are no wires, there are no much installation
troubles, which further means less installation and
maintenance costs for the customer. Further, since the
communication takes place through the internet, the overall
cost of a call is far lesser than a conventional long
distance telephone call from a conventional phone.
The only money a customer may have to shell out is the
monthly tariff for the VoIP and internet service provider,
both of which combined won't cross £/$100 in normal cases.
Now let's see how VoIP phones work. The VoIP architecture
includes a broadband internet connection, a VoIP phone,
router, and a gateway. The purpose of the router is to
route the calls to the internet, while the function of the
gateway – also called the analogue telephone adapter (ATA)
– is to convert analogue signals to digital data packets
before sending it over the web. Here, it must be kept in
mind that for IP phones, since it comes loaded with all the
required hardware and software components, it can be
directly plugged to the router bypassing the ATA. Now, at
the recipient's end, the digital packets are reconverted
back to the original analog format, and are then send over
a Public Telephone Switch Network or PSTN to the number the
caller had dialed. The whole process is many times
efficient and quicker than the conventional wire
communication.
Then there are soft VoIP phones or virtual VoIP phones that
can be installed in a laptop or desktop. It works almost
the same like the real VoIP phones, the only difference is
that the dialing component here is simulated as a user
interface on the monitor and the users have to click on it
using a mouse to dial a number. Further, since the soft
phone loads all the required VoIP features, no additional
external components is required to make the call. All the
behind scene technicalities will be managed by the service
provider himself.
If there are any other advantages with VoIP phones, then it
is that it gives the customers maximum flexibility at
virtually no additional cost. While the traditional
telephones are tied to telephone lines permanently, the
ATAs can be taken with the customers to virtually any part
of the world. Then by connecting it to a telephone and an
internet connection, one could make VoIP calls to any other
phone in the same ATA network for no cost. For other
networks, it may cost a bit, but a lot cheaper than long
distance calls.
Finally, all standard VoIP phones comes inbuilt with
features such as caller id, repeat dialing, call transfer,
and call waiting, which may be missing in most
unsophisticated conventional phones. For advanced features
like call forwarding, forwarding to voicemail box, giving
busy signal to the caller if busy, or playing automated
messages, however, the service provider might charge a fee.
Such paid services also include the facility to check voice
mails over the web or attach messages to an e-mail that is
sent to one's PDA/PC.
About the Author:
Lee Smith writes about VoIP Phones and Providers
www.networklondon.co.uk/communications/voip.html
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