ATTENTION: You are viewing a page formatted for mobile devices; to view the full web page, click HERE.

Main Area and Open Discussion > General Software Discussion

VOIP - alternatives, PROs and CONs.

(1/2) > >>

IainB:
I initially started using VOIP to make cost-effective phonecalls (i.e., at rates much cheaper than toll charges) to phones in international destinations.
The ones I used were:

* (a) PC-to-Phone, and
* (b) a little-advertised NZ Telecom VOIP service - where the user can place calls from their NZ Telecom landline, to mobile and landline numbers overseas.
I still use both of these, and the other day I opened an account with Skype - the rates are similar to PC-to-Phone.

I have also been using FREE PC-to-PC audio only, and audio-video systems, including:

* SpeakFreely
* Google Chat
* Skype
I would be interested in sharing experiences of these and other VOIP systems, with DC Forum users.

IainB:
Speak Freely VOIP phone.
(Notes as at 2004-05-12.)

This seems to be an even better alternative to Skype (which is likely to be free only as long as it's in Beta test release), and a lot more secure.  It requires no indexing server (which Skype does need) for your contacts - you just type in their IP address - in fact, if you are chatting to the contact on (say) MSN, Speak Freely somehow picks up their IP address.  There is a version for Linux or Unix also, I gather.

Speak Freely was apparently developed by one John Walker over a period of 7 years, so it will have all the bugs knocked out of it.  It is still under gradual improvement in the public domain through Soundforge:
http://sourceforge.net/

Steve Walker announced his cessation of development of Speak Freely here ("End of Life Announcement"):
http://www.fourmilab.ch/speakfree/
- this makes fascinating reading, including the linked articles; I recommend you read it.


References for Speak Freely:
http://www.fourmilab.ch/    (what a great website!)


You can download the latest v7.6a of the software from:
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=72602&package_id=72486&release_id=209133

The Windows v7.6a (2004-01-11 08:20) has 3 files:
* the Windows version, with cryptography: speakfb.zip
* the source code for this: speakfs.zip
* the Windows version, without cryptography: spookfb.zip

There are several Soundforge mirror sites.  I downloaded these files directly from Asian mirrors:
http://keihanna.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/speak-freely-w/speakfb.zip
http://keihanna.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/speak-freely-w/speakfs.zip
http://aleron.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/speak-freely-w/spookfb.zip
_________________________________

2015-03-09: The SourceForge site is apparently still at v7.6a: Speak Freely

Renegade:
I've got a Korean SK Internet phone. It looks just like a regular phone and works wonderfully.

I've tried Jitsi, but can never seem to get anyone to use it, so... pretty useless. :(

I would be interested in hearing if anyone has found something that is easy enough for anyone to use.

4wd:
I've got a Korean SK Internet phone. It looks just like a regular phone and works wonderfully.

I've tried Jitsi, but can never seem to get anyone to use it, so... pretty useless. :(-Renegade (March 08, 2015, 09:34 PM)
--- End quote ---

I would have thought you'd have RedPhone or something similar on your Android phone also :)

Renegade:
I've got a Korean SK Internet phone. It looks just like a regular phone and works wonderfully.

I've tried Jitsi, but can never seem to get anyone to use it, so... pretty useless. :(-Renegade (March 08, 2015, 09:34 PM)
--- End quote ---

I would have thought you'd have RedPhone or something similar on your Android phone also :)
-4wd (March 09, 2015, 01:49 AM)
--- End quote ---

Thanks for the suggestion.

One of the problems I have is dealing with corporate firewalls. My phone gets around them nicely as it goes over the regular telephony network.

Now, for mobiles, well... I'm not a fan of them. They still have crappy speakers and mics that are near useless. I've been spoiled by Skype with far better audio quality, and I have grown to loathe telephony quality audio. I prefer to use my own high quality equipment, and most often, people have equipment that is much higher quality than the crap in regular landline phones or mobile phones. That's quite nice to deal with.

Also, the majority of my phone calls (other than to my wife) are all overseas/international, and usually over Skype.

Does anyone remember Dialpad? That was a while back. :)

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

Go to full version