How Does VOIP Work?
You have probably heard about it; maybe your friends or coworkers have talked about how they are no longer paying for long distance phone
calls because of something called VOIP - Voice over Internet Protocol. If you have been paying large long distance phone bills, it's time for you
to learn the answer to the question "How Does VOIP Work?" VOIP is the latest telecommunications internet technology that is predicted to be in
use in close to 5 million American homes by the year 2006.
It will allow you to make long distance calls over your internet connection, bypassing most, or all of you your long distance provider's
charges. However, several large telecommunications companies have caught on to the growing trend for consumers to bypass their charges, and have
reacted by offering "packaged services" that include your regular, local phone line service and the VOIP service that will let you place calls
over the internet.
When answering the question "How does VOIP Work?" it's important to realize that there are actually a few types of VOIP technologies
that are currently in use. The first is called ATA or Analog Telephone Adapter technology. The ATA technology does exactly what it sounds like;
it takes the analog signal on your regular telephone line and translates it into a digital signal. That digital signal is then sent via the
internet. This is the type of service that the large telecommunications providers are offering. They will mail you the ATA and you can set it up
easily on your own.
Another technology involved in learning just how does VOIP work is the most exciting for the average consumer, as it doesn't require a monthly
service charge from a provider in order to make free long distance calls. It is computer-to-computer VOIP service. In this case, you download
free or purchase low-cost software that turns your computer into the "phone."
In addition to the software, you'll need speakers so you can hear the other party, a microphone so you can speak to them, a sound card in your
computer, and a preferably high-speed internet connection so the signal can travel fast enough to avoid delays in what you or the other party
hears. The person you call doesn't need to be talking to you over a computer; a regular phone will work just fine. You can use the service on
your end to make calls to anyone, anywhere without a charge.
Now that we've answered the question of "How Does VOIP Work," you might be interested in trying it for yourself. But what you don't realize is
that you most likely already are. Telephone companies have been using the technology for several years in order to route the mass number of calls
they receive more efficiently over their networks.
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