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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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The power of competition is amazing. I have been using Vonage for a few
years, and can not tell the difference between Vonage and BellSouth except for the lower price and substantially more features offered by Vonage. Today, I got an offer in the mail from AT&T offering VOIP and similar features at the same price as Vonage. As long as Vonage continues to provides excellent service, I will not change, but it is nice to see the market place working. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote in message ... The power of competition is amazing. I have been using Vonage for a few years, and can not tell the difference between Vonage and BellSouth except for the lower price and substantially more features offered by Vonage. Today, I got an offer in the mail from AT&T offering VOIP and similar features at the same price as Vonage. As long as Vonage continues to provides excellent service, I will not change, but it is nice to see the market place working. Your high speed internet must be significantly more reliable than ours from charter. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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Del Cecchi wrote:
"Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote in message ... The power of competition is amazing. I have been using Vonage for a few years, and can not tell the difference between Vonage and BellSouth except for the lower price and substantially more features offered by Vonage. Today, I got an offer in the mail from AT&T offering VOIP and similar features at the same price as Vonage. As long as Vonage continues to provides excellent service, I will not change, but it is nice to see the market place working. Your high speed internet must be significantly more reliable than ours from charter. It really is. The download is at 20,000 kbs and upload at 2000 kbs, and I can't remember the last time I had an outage. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 6 Dec 2007 19:42:21 -0600, "Del Cecchi"
wrote: Today, I got an offer in the mail from AT&T offering VOIP and similar features at the same price as Vonage. As long as Vonage continues to provides excellent service, I will not change, but it is nice to see the market place working. Your high speed internet must be significantly more reliable than ours from charter. Here is is a fairly good web site for testing your service quality: http://myspeed.visualware.com/ You could use it to document quality issues with your ISP. |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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Wayne.B wrote:
On Thu, 6 Dec 2007 19:42:21 -0600, "Del Cecchi" wrote: Today, I got an offer in the mail from AT&T offering VOIP and similar features at the same price as Vonage. As long as Vonage continues to provides excellent service, I will not change, but it is nice to see the market place working. Your high speed internet must be significantly more reliable than ours from charter. Here is is a fairly good web site for testing your service quality: http://myspeed.visualware.com/ You could use it to document quality issues with your ISP. 26+ Mbps? I don't think so. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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Wayne.B wrote in
: http://myspeed.visualware.com/ Man that sucks! They said I was only doing 2.3Mbps and too jerky for VoIP service! Use the Flash tester at Speakeasy from lots of places across the country. http://www.speakeasy.net/speedtest/ Speakeasy uses a LARGE file for the test, bypassing any ISP pulse of data from some trick. The speeds Speakeasy shows are SUSTAINED, not peak speeds...a true characterization of your speed. Here's my results on the SAME system from Speakeasy's Atlanta hub: Last Result: Download Speed: 7373 kbps (921.6 KB/sec transfer rate) Upload Speed: 349 kbps (43.6 KB/sec transfer rate) There's 4 people connected to my Skype supernode, during this test, but they hardly use any bandwidth like Grabit downloading from Usenet does. Seattle is as far from me as Speakeasy tests. It only showed: Last Result: Download Speed: 3037 kbps (379.6 KB/sec transfer rate) Upload Speed: 310 kbps (38.8 KB/sec transfer rate) at this moment's net loading. My ISP head end is in Atlanta, so that shows what Knology does to the head end of the net at 7.3Mbps. Your URL must be on the west coast to get only 2.3Mbps down to me. It reads way slow, giving a false report of your true speed. Larry -- Isn't it ironic that the same ISPs that are telling you you're downloads threaten their networks...... .....are testing 100Gbps TV to sell on the SAME systems? http://tinyurl.com/27qx3v |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 06 Dec 2007 10:24:14 -0500, "Reginald P. Smithers III"
wrote: The power of competition is amazing. I have been using Vonage for a few years, and can not tell the difference between Vonage and BellSouth except for the lower price and substantially more features offered by Vonage. Today, I got an offer in the mail from AT&T offering VOIP and similar features at the same price as Vonage. As long as Vonage continues to provides excellent service, I will not change, but it is nice to see the market place working. VOIP is a diaster waiting to happen and when it does, all you VOIP losers...er...users are going to be stuck with no way to communicate. You heard it here first. |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Thu, 06 Dec 2007 10:24:14 -0500, "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote: The power of competition is amazing. I have been using Vonage for a few years, and can not tell the difference between Vonage and BellSouth except for the lower price and substantially more features offered by Vonage. Today, I got an offer in the mail from AT&T offering VOIP and similar features at the same price as Vonage. As long as Vonage continues to provides excellent service, I will not change, but it is nice to see the market place working. VOIP is a diaster waiting to happen and when it does, all you VOIP losers...er...users are going to be stuck with no way to communicate. You heard it here first. Shhhhhhhh. Reggie stuck with no way to communicate? What's the down side to that? |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Thu, 06 Dec 2007 10:24:14 -0500, "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote: The power of competition is amazing. I have been using Vonage for a few years, and can not tell the difference between Vonage and BellSouth except for the lower price and substantially more features offered by Vonage. Today, I got an offer in the mail from AT&T offering VOIP and similar features at the same price as Vonage. As long as Vonage continues to provides excellent service, I will not change, but it is nice to see the market place working. VOIP is a diaster waiting to happen and when it does, all you VOIP losers...er...users are going to be stuck with no way to communicate. You heard it here first. What, I can't hear you, can you speak a little louder. |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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On Dec 7, 7:11 am, "Reginald P. Smithers III"
wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Thu, 06 Dec 2007 10:24:14 -0500, "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote: The power of competition is amazing. I have been using Vonage for a few years, and can not tell the difference between Vonage and BellSouth except for the lower price and substantially more features offered by Vonage. Today, I got an offer in the mail from AT&T offering VOIP and similar features at the same price as Vonage. As long as Vonage continues to provides excellent service, I will not change, but it is nice to see the market place working. VOIP is a diaster waiting to happen and when it does, all you VOIP losers...er...users are going to be stuck with no way to communicate. You heard it here first. What, I can't hear you, can you speak a little louder.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Now Reggie, you must know that VOIP can't possibly compete with ancient 2 copper wire and switchhouse technology where every connection you make degrades the signal! Or can it?? Legacy telephony solutions are narrowband, which seriously limits the achievable quality. Wideband codecs could potentially be used in digital telephone systems, but this has never been practical enough to gain any real interest. In fact, in traditional telephony applications, the speech bandwidth is restricted much more than the inherent limitations of narrowband coding. Typical telephony is band limited to 300 Hz to 3400 Hz. This bandwidth limitation explains why we are used to expect telephony speech to sound weak, unnatural, and lack crispness. Sound Sample 4: First: Speech sampled at 44.1 kHz. Second: Narrowband speech. Third: Telephony band speech. Most phone lines connected to a household are traditional two-wire copper cables. Pure digital connections are typically only found in enterprise environments. Due to poor connections or old wires, significant distortion is often generated in the analog part of the phone connection, a type of distortion that is entirely absent from VoIP implementations. The cordless phones so popular today also generate significant amounts of analog distortion due to radio interference and other implementation issues. |
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