Monday, August 13, 2007

[TechRepublic] VoIP in a box?

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VoIP in a box?

There's been a lot of buzz in the VoIP community recently about ooma, a device that the company advertises will allow you to "own your own dial tone." The key here is that you buy a box -- not a service. I dug a little deeper into the available information about this "VoIP in a box" solution, and I've requested an evaluation device that I can try out. Meanwhile, here's what I found out.

Debra Littlejohn Shinder is a technology consultant, trainer and writer. She has authored a number of books on computer operating systems, networking, and security and currently specializes in security issues and Microsoft products. She has been awarded Microsoft's Most Valuable Professional (MVP) status in Windows Server Security.

Don't miss these VoIP resources

New VoIP company OOMA offers free calling. . . forever?
Blogger John Bartley writes, "A Bay Area start-up, OOMA, announced free calling with no per-call cost for buyers of its $399 'OOMA hub.' But, unless the pricing changes after the early adopters buy in, it looks to me like Walt Mossberg drank the Kool-aid, for I do not see how this VoIP start-up can stay in business."

10 things you should know about VoIP over wireless
The next step in network convergence is the combination of VoIP and wireless networking technologies. Although VoIP over wireless offers benefits, the technology isn't without drawbacks. Deb Shinder describes the advantages and challenges of VoIP over wireless.

SolutionBase: Configuring additional features in Asterisk 1.2
If all Asterisk did as a VoIP solution was route calls, it would get the job done, but not be a very good alternative to proprietary systems. Brian Smith shows how to modify .conf files in Asterisk 1.2 to customize call handling.

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