Oh dear NGM! You're starting to remind me of the old days when I ran an IT company and would rave to my SME customers about something called "email" and something call "the internet".
They all just laughed and thought my business card with my "email" and "web" address was cute!
Now I have my VoIP address on my biz card - and folks think that's cute!
Quote:It in fact costs them the lost traffic on their mobile network!!! You really think people who block free 0800 calls because they fear some customers will use third party call carriers are going to roll over and make it easy for you to route calls off their networks. Absolutley not. You can expect them to start locking the Sims down too so they will only work in one of their own phones and that phone will not have any Wifi functionality. If it does have Wifi it will only connect with a proprietary Orange encoded wireless base station.
WiFi/WiMAX VoIP are a total sea change. This is not some little adjustment or altercation over 0800 numbers. As you can tell I'm plugged into the telcoms business and know what's happening. WiFi/WiMAX VoIP and VoIP in general is the biggest thing since email/www. Billions are being invested. Huge corporations (starting in Japan and USA) are installing massive WiFi VoIP networks with thousands of AP's.
Yes the mobile cos will be linked-in as the WiMAX stations can sit on their towers without interfering with their GSM. And yes WiMAX is a couple of years away at least. But INTEL are putting the circuitry for WiFi/WiMAX directly into their future generation of chips - so everything will become wired.
The producers of WiFi VoIP phones and WiFi hardware are NOT the mobile companies - so they don't have a monopoly.
Quote:Make phone calls all round London over wifi. Yeah I'm sure you do and keep dropping the call out every 10 seconds or so as you move.
True - but a huge percentage of mobile calls are made when stationary at desks; tables; pubs; sport stadia; airports; schools; campuses etc... Your handset can see if your calling party is "on-line" and route the call via VoIP.
Quote:WiMax is an uproven pipe dream at present. Its great until the air waves are clogged. My current Netgear DG834g adsl wireless router starts having reception problems when I turn the video sender on my television on. What happens when there are tens of thousands of people clogging these same bands.
Billions are being spent to solve these issues. Such problems in the WiFi VoIP area have already been solved by companies such as:
www.merunetworks.com Quote:Why are BT spending a fortune on upgrading their fixed line network if WiMax is going to be so excellent and all reaching a solution?
Because they know the whole world is going IP for data and voice (and IP TV/Movies!) - and it's so much simpler/efficient. And the backbone will be needed to route all the traffic between the various hubs. I'm not saying the WiMAX will be a total solution; but it's ability to provide data and voice to a wide area is not to be underestimated.
Quote:Not everyone lives in Covent Garden. If WiMax was as great as you maintained the mobile companies wouldn't still be building any new transmitters. Instead they would all be planning their own funerals.
Actually they are all shit-scared. I have friends who are telcoms consultants and they say the mobile companies are wetting themselves. They've already taken a huge hit with 3G and they're wondering what's around the corner.
Their hope is that POTS will disappear to replaced by WiFi VoIP and cellular. If they can get folks away from landlines and just have mobile handsets; then mobile calls via cellular might take a huge boost - even with many VoIP calls.
The change is being lead by the big corporates. Meru Networks are installing a huge WiFi/VoIP network for a Japanese gas corp. They'll use a WiFi/Cellular handset so that employees can have just one contact number. They use the WiFi in the corps buildings/network and then move over to Cellular outside. POTS goes down the drain. The mobile phone companies can hardly then demand that they use some sort of propriety WiFi VoIP system.
It's true that most of the public don't have hours spare to find the best deal; but they will snap up new technology pretty quickly these days. Look how quickly we swap out our old mobile phones - every year!
Quote:But have it your own way. WiMax will of course I'm sure be the answer to everything even though it hasn't even successfully passed testing yet.
OK - I'm not saying it's the second coming (that's next Wednesday in Regent's park
); but the combination of WiFi/WiMAX/VoIP/Multi Mode Cellular handsets is pretty strong and will create a mini revolution at least.
Huge hurdles had to be overcome to make VoIP practicable over what was a network designed for data packets - but it's now arrived.
Remember: VoIP is just email for voice! Your VoIP address is just a URL like your email address. Indeed with the right set-up your email and VoIP address can be the same.
Email is FREE (once you have the connection).
Ditto VoIP.
Almost EVERYBODY has an email address.
Almost EVERYBODY has a mobile phone - and soon they will ALL have WiFi VoIP wether you want it or not.
The combination of the above will drive the huge proliferation of WiFi/WiMAX /VoIP/Broadband.