IP Telephony Hardware Stretching Toward Home Users 98
Banjonardo writes "On today's edition of The Contra Costa Times , there was an interesting article about an actual appliance that replaces the computer in net-to-phone calls. The phone can be connected to an ethernet port, though I imagine DSL users would have to have their PCs on to log in. The company has a nice website dedicated to it. Lately most PC-to-phone programs have been asking for more money for international calls. Netmeeting doesn't cut it for all video needs, but several alternatives are quite acceptable, even for international calls." The phone the article concentrates on requires broadband and a home gateway to set-up; luckily neither of those things is rare any more. A few of the competing devices are mentioned as well; you can almost smell companies like Cisco drooling to own voice transport.
Re:Cisco - Voice Transport (Score:2)
Disclaimer: I'm an ex-employee (moved countries, so we parted on friendly terms:) from the Wellington, NZ branch, but that was a year ago now hence the uncertainty (and a quick look at the site didn't help).
Bill - aka taniwha
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Re:Its not the bandwidth.... (Score:1)
ITU rec G.723.1 is the common low-bandwidth codec in use, and it goes down to 5.6 kb/s, but the 6.4 kb/s varient is more common. G.729, at 8 kb/s, begins to approximate the quality you'd see on a voice call. G.711 is what's commonly used in telephony systems, and that's 64 kb/s. (kb=kilobits).
State of the World (Score:2)
The primary problem with the net2phone box is that it uses the Internet as transport, and there is no end-to-end management of the internet. So, the packets that contain your voice have to compete on an equal footing with other peoples packets, despite the fact that yours are much more time-sensitive.
The delay is likely due to the amount of buffering that needs to be done because of this. And, the fuzzy audio is because the audio still needs to be compressed, despite the high-bandwidth connection. Most home broadband connections can transport much more data coming down than going back up, so the outgoing voice stream needs a lot of compression.
There are other problems: What services does this box do? Can it handle 3-way calls, call-waiting, call-forwarding, etc.... What happens when you plug a modem or fax into it?
What I think you'll see is the broadband service provider putting in a home gateway (Analog phone-to-VoIP Gateway, not the ubquitous linksys box), then routing that VoIP over their private network, instead of feeding it straight to the internet. Cable-modem folks are especially eager to get into that market, because while VoIP doesn't use up that much bandwidth, phone-calls are a high-dollar business.
GPL IP telephony (Score:2)
http://www.openh323.org/
http://www.linuxtelephony.org/
http://www.linuxjack.com/
http://www.openphone.org/http://www.voxilla.org
http://www.speakfreely.org/
http://www.fourmilab.ch/speakfree/unix/sfunix.h
Why not use a small PC? (Score:2)
Isn't there already a Palm-type device with built-in microphone and speaker which runs Linux? Use that!
Or better, sell some small 'base station' for your digital mobile phone which sends the GSM data across the net. You'd temporarily swap out the account details card from your mobile and replace it with one that contacts your home base station (which has a very weak transmitter covering a radius of about 200m).
Re:Nice idea, but ... (Score:1)
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:1)
Large corporations aren't the only benefactors. VoIP services are also aimed squarely at small biz, over T1 circuits (See Cbeyond [cbeyond.net] or Broadriver [broadriver.com] for examples). Packages start at around $500 (huh? $500 for T1 and phone service? Yep.)
Unlike what one poster mentioned, 911 and caller ID actually can be supported. You really can't be a CLEC offering services in a US market without 911. And, yep, they can trace it back, hold the circuit open and other neat tricks. BUT, your POTS line provides its own power, so you know it works if your lights are out and someone starts into a stroke.
(Though, what's not currently there in most implementations is the FBI's CALEA [askcalea.com] requirements. Shhh.. :-)
As someone mentioned before, the keys are latency (you've got a pretty small budget to work with before the human ear notices) and bandwidth controls for shared networks (can't let data overrun the voice, and that means tight QoS). A voice stream (at G.711 encoding, which would give the same voice quality as a standard PSTN call) sucks up around 80-100 kbps in either direction, and if you're sharing the trunk with data, you gotta make sure that the entire stream gets through. Otherwise it gets chopped up and sounds like Armstrong on the moon.
--
Never knock on Death's door.
Ring the doorbell and run
(He hates that).
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:2)
Since when?
http://www.papajohnsonline.com/html/pj/pj_i ndex.js p
Re:Okay, read the article before you submit it... (Score:1)
all problems with IP telephony over internet is the fault of the internet/your ISP/the Govt/Universities/Spammers/Everyone with the letter A in their names, and finally to round out the blame, every
Until we get a voice compression system that can compress my voice into a 5Kbit stream cleanly ant at telephone line quality, it will not happen over the internet. AT&T on the otherhand has IP telephony working great in cablemodem land. But that's on a private network (the cablemodem network) and with some bandwidth room.
Latency not bandwidth (Score:2)
Until we get a voice compression system that can compress my voice into a 5Kbit stream cleanly ant at telephone line quality, it will not happen over the internet.
I'd say its also going to take people learning to live with phone calls that suffer from a lot of digital artifacts (high latency, jitter, dropouts, etc). I think many people who own cell phones already are there in terms of noise acceptance. It's getting people who grew up in urban areas in the 60s and 70s on 56k toll-quality to accept it. It's too bad the older generation who grew up on circa 1920s handsets and even older switching and cabling aren't the decision makers on IP telephony purchasing, they'd tell you, "Hey, it sounds great compared to the 1910 Bell wall set I have at home, shut up about your 56k toll quality already..."
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:2)
I have abandoned my POTS line, in favor of a combination of Dialpad for long-distance and a $30 a month AT&T cellphone for local. And so far it's worked rather well. I have more cell time than I could ever use, and when I need to call someone LD, Dialpad is there for me. And I'm not paying much more than I was for landline local plus long distance.
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Re:Its not the bandwidth.... (Score:1)
Its not the bandwidth.... (Score:3)
Its the latency, stoopid.
You can do telephone-quality vox over ip with as little as 3K/sec bandwidth. I remember toying around with some early, early stuff back around 1993 or so that had nothing more than two 33.6K modems on either end, and it worked fine quality wise--The issue was latency, not quality. Width of the pipe isn't the issue, gang. You can have the widest pipe in the world, but it will be totally useless if your latency is terrible. Who cares what the quality is if theres a 3 second delay between point A and point B?
Broadband is nice, sure, but its not going to do anything to improve the way your packets are relayed, and subsequently the delay between sender and reciever.
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:2)
Re:Its not the bandwidth.... (Score:1)
Re:Okay, read the article before you submit it... (Score:1)
As for the difference between software and hardware solutions, well there isn't any. In fact the only thing you could reasonably put in hardware is the codec.
Disclaimer: I work for Net2Phone. This are my opinions, not my employer's.
Re:Other companies have done this... (Score:1)
Re:The Net2Phone RAVE is a rebadged Aplio/Pro (Score:2)
Just of note:
The Aplio/Pro is Linux based, and the Aplio/Phone is not (dedicated hardware). Aplio chose to head away from dedicated hardware simply because of the development costs.
All it seems as though they have done is to point the unit at their Gateway/Gatekeeper, which is how the calls get to/from the IP network to phone lines. These devices should quite easily be capable of talking to any gateway/gatekeeper that meets the specs, like Cisco, Ericsson, OpenH323, etc.
If you want to learn more about VOIP, and the H.323 protocol, check out http://www.openh323.org/ [openh323.org] which has a wealth of information and links.
The Net2Phone RAVE is a rebadged Aplio/Pro (Score:1)
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:1)
Not yet, that is, until they get GPS installed into every cell phone. Even now, they can tell which sector in which cell you're calling in from, and that will localize you to within a few city blocks.
Re:HR 1542 would make VoIP Illegal (Score:1)
Re:HR 1542 would make VoIP Illegal (Score:2)
OT: moderation (Score:1)
RTFA (Read The Freakin' Article!)
KM
PC to PC Voice over IP using regular Phone (Score:1)
Bad for asynchronous rate lines (Score:2)
Just a word of warning: never mention the word "server" in earshot of your cable modem installation tech.
Problem (Score:1)
Re:What good with PC on? (Score:1)
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Re:Cisco already has this (Score:1)
-k
Re:I want a phone that plugs into an ethernet jack (Score:2)
not worth the money (Score:1)
blows in comparison to POTS. And you can get
5c a minute long distance 24/7 from Qwest. For
2c more a minute I'll save $125 and not keep
saying 'huh?" every 30 seconds
Re:OT: moderation (Score:2)
Re:Legislation problems (Score:2)
Re:Cordless VOIP phone anyone? (Score:1)
Re:Cordless VOIP phone anyone? (Score:1)
Here's the data sheet! [symbol.com]
I work for a Wholesale VOIP carrier (Score:4)
The next logical off step after phone-voip-phone and PC-Phone is Phone-Phone mini gateways.
In the next year you'll be seing usb boxes hanging off your computer or etnernet ones of your hubs that plug into your house phone network(unpluggin from outside telco legacy network) and you will be able to use your hose phones to Call anywhere and recieve calls..
Its gonna be a great next few years and after 5-10 your gonna see the need for ILEC's completely disapear NPA assignments and thats it..
Re:Not over the Internet (Score:1)
Needs IPSec tunneling and Non-Net2Phone VoIP (Score:1)
Heck, I'd be happy just to find a cheap box that can act as a NAT and IPsec box. All the cheap NAT routers that I've seen support, at most, IPSec pass thru so you can use your PC to create an IPSec tunnel to your corporate LAN, but the router itself doesn't support being an IPSec client.
Cisco already has this (Score:2)
I don't think they aspire to own the transport, they just want to profit from increased bandwidth usage and more Cisco devices being sold. They are sticking to standards in this market like they do everywhere else (AFAIK).
AT&T has had this for a while (Score:1)
Okay, read the article before you submit it... (Score:2)
At my office, we have the 3com NBX system. Once you leave the LAN, we use normal long distance, but internally it is over ethernet.
The quality is fine.
However, once you use the software based phones, the lag is horrible, and generally worthless. Dedicated hardware is much faster than software over generic hardware.
Alex
Gee, that's helpful... (Score:2)
We were just going over Ethernet, the same ethernet as the physical phones, so there was no latency issue.
It could be the OS, it could be the scheduling, but it sucked. I don't care that someone will whine about how other OSes that don't have the software. A non-Win32 version of this is kinda silly.
There just isn't a market for software that needs to be on a tuned Linux box. A tuned Linux box is no more useful than a physical phone, because I need to tune it for a special purpose. Once I do that, I'll buy the phones.
Alex
Re:Cisco - Voice Transport (Score:1)
------------------------------------------
If God Dropped Acid, Would he see People???
Linksys (Score:4)
Re:Latency not bandwidth (Score:1)
The moral of the story is the bandwidth was the same but latency made all the difference in the world. You can do it if you have a dedicated connection or call in the middle of the night over the internet.
Re:Cisco - Voice Transport (Score:1)
The biggest problem with IP Telephony isn't the hardware but a management issue. Most larger companies have seperate network and phone people (and they should) and you will get totally different responses depending on who is making the call on IP Telephony. Phone people will be concerned with latency and network people are concerned with bandwidth first.
To do it well on the corporate network you must support priority packet tagging all the way to the IP phones. This means using a supported layer 3 switch/router all the way through to insure QOS(quality of service) aka latency. There are non-Cisco layer 2 switches that have this capability. Cisco's solution is to over-provision your network. Paying for a bunch of aggregate Gigabit fiber lines is not my idea of cost effectiveness.
It isn't about the damned bandwidth. (Score:1)
Re:Legislation problems (Score:1)
Bagpuss
Your friendly cloth cat
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:5)
The subscription is usually around the same as monthly phone charges with potentially greatly increased functionality. Wouldn't you rather negotiate your speed dial numbers through a java-gui interface to your address book, instead of trying to remember who's programmed into where?
The incoming phone number charge varies greatly with providers. The company I work for, for example, will be providing an incoming number (toll free) as part of the base subscription price.
The real power of VoIP, mostly using SIP, is that it can easily go back and forth from data to PSTN networks. There are several transit providers offering soft-switching, as well as hardware vendors offering boxes for companies who already have large numbers of circuits from Telcos, perhaps with numbers attached to them already.
VoIP is not really aimed directly at the home market, but instead at businesses, especially large multi-office corporations. Imagine being able to build a transparent PBX system with a soft-switch at the "edge of network" that people call into. Then you pay next to nothing to route calls across the internal LAN/WAN and can transfer calls easily from any phone in any office to any other phone in any other office.
Obviously there'll be a slow phase in to different markets, based on who has the most use for the technology. Eventually it'll become refined, polished and cheap enough to make it to the home, much as every other technology has.
Just remember, people used to sneer at the thought of anything other than dialup being affordable enough for home Internet acces. That was, of course, after they'd finished sneering at the thought of people connecting to the Internet from their homes at all.
Imagine.... a phone filter... (Score:1)
That would make it a dream appliance.
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IP Telephony Hardware Stretching Toward Home USers (Score:1)
Or did they just hold down the shift key too long?
What good with PC on? (Score:1)
Lenny
Re:What good with PC on? (Score:1)
Maybe you should read the article,
Lenny
Cool Cisco stuff (Score:2)
wishus
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Re:Cordless VOIP phone anyone? (Score:2)
Cisco makes some really slick SIP/Skinny phones, but the cost about $1000 each. Though the average, non-technical person could use one quite well, I doubt they would be excited about purchasing one.
Who wouldn't love to have a cordless phone that runs VOIP on encrypted 802.11b, with both POTS and Ethernet in the base?
Your grasp of technology is laughable - if you're going allow the option of connecting to the PSTN at the base, why would you packetize data in the handset? And since it doesn't make sense to packetize data at the handset, even if you don't want to connect to the PSTN, why not use RF? It would be alot easier than trying to use H.323 or SIP between the handset and base.
wishus
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Re:Linksys (Score:1)
Creative's VOIP Blaster (Score:1)
Anyway, if we could "figure out" more about it, adding linux support and breaking it's need for a phone provider would be sweet.
Oh yeah -- calling Hong Kong is cheaper than calling in the US! (.04/min vs .05/min)
Re:State of the World (Score:2)
Check out this article [wired.com] for information of smart routers that prioritize packets based on their contents. The claim is that packets containing temporal information (e.g., audio, video) will be passed more synchronously that packets containing less temporally-dependent information.
Reliability (Score:2)
It's not just the reliability of your DSL/Cable provider, and "last mile" fibre isn't the problem. My DSL's connection to the DSLAM has been, to my knowledge, uninterrupted (except, of course, at my end). But then you have the DNS servers and every hop between you and your call's recipient, and the reliability starts to drop. Not to levels that make home internet too difficult, but to levels that would make phone service unbearable.
Of course, that doesn't even count the biggest reliability problem of all (which the initial reply misses). How stable is your electricity? I'm in Minneapolis, and even though we're supposedly not having any problems this year, it was out twice last week for an hour at a time. Unless you've got your own generator or some serious UPS time, if your electricity goes down, your IP telephony goes down (for that matter, if the only phones you have require electricity on your end to function, your SOL too). I've nowhere near enough trust in our power grids to abandon the 47 milliampres or so that the phone company is sending to me to power my POTS.It's as expensive as reg LD. (Score:1)
Unless you already have DSL/Cable.
Re:I work for a Wholesale VOIP carrier (Score:1)
I've recently purchased a Creative VoIP Blaster, which is essentially that. It has a USB interface on one end, and an RJ11 for any telephone on the other. Run the software, plug in the phone and you're ready to go. The neat thing is (with their software,) you can actually use the phone to dial another computer up.
I'm not too familiar with the way telephone lines are hooked up in the house, but i would imagine that you could plug this VoIP blaster into your telephone junction box (where your home lines are connected to the telco's) and be able to use any phone in the house for VoIP.
Cisco - Voice Transport (Score:1)
-- .sig are belong to us!
All your
HR 1542 would make VoIP Illegal (Score:1)
doesn't really matter (Score:2)
since odds are we're not going to pay for it. [slashdot.org]
Dialpad and Ricochet instead of a cellphone (Score:1)
Voice over IP also tends to have problems relating to bandwidth. When I have something important to talk about with something I will avoid using a VOIP application because often you may cut out or freeze up or sound like your using a 1980's cellphone. Don't get me wrong. The technology is improving, and as more people get broadband access at home it becomes a more viable option, however, it still needs some improvement. And when a company begins to sell you a device that you just plug into an ethernet jack you know it's going to cost per month or per call because you are most likely no longer seeing ads.
It's a neat technology. And I can just see call centers calling people about the new credit card deal that they are offering utilizing these!
[Something witty and intelligent should have appeared here.]
International Calling. BigZoo.com (Score:2)
BigZoo.com has been a problem for me recently. They have charged me for calls that have not been connected. They have refused to review my bills with them for return of the money.
Are there any alternatives for inexpensive calling internationally?
What about in the U.S.? What is the cheapest phone-to-phone method of calling? What is the cheapest PC-to-phone method of calling?
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:1)
Re:Linksys (Score:1)
Re:Phones... (Score:1)
The ubiquitous Nortel Norstar system does this, and it's been around for 10 years or so. When I need to work somewhere else, I just bring my phone with me and my calls automatically follow.
Re:Legislation problems (Score:1)
Sure. Saudi Arabia is a notable example, since they have a high proportion of overseas residents who would like to be able to make phone calls for less than $.70/minute. For a while they blocked all calls to +1.206 because a lot of callback companies were based in and around Seattle. The main effective result of their ambitious internet filtering system is to make it difficult to use VOIP services. So you're in fine company.
I thought that Euro governments were supposed to have opened up telecoms markets by this year.
Re:IP Telephony Hardware Stretching Toward Home US (Score:2)
Ecuadorian would mean someone who lives along the equator. I guess you're one of those arrogant Andeans who think "Ecuador" only includes a certain country sandwiched between Peru and Colombia.
Malaysian would mean someone who lives on the Malay peninsula. I guess you're one of those arrogant Malays who thinks "Malaysia" only includes a certain country north of Singapore.
South African would mean someone who lives in the south of Africa. I guess you're one of those arrogant Afrikaners who thinks that "South Africa" only includes the RSA.
Turkish would mean someone who lives in a certain near-flightless bird in the vulture family. I guess you're one of those arrogant Ottomans who thinks "Turkey" only includes the country straddling the Bosporus.
Lemme guess, you're either Canadian or a South American grad student. Either way, you're an idiot.
Re:It's as expensive as reg LD. (Score:2)
Even then it's more expensive than regular LD (normal dial-1 charges these days being around 4-5c domestic, no fees or minimums, as long as you don't go with MCI/ATT/Sprint) unless you make hundreds of hours of calls. I cannot see how this could possibly be worth it. I've been looking around for a device like this to hang on one of the ports of our PBX just to see how it works out, but I am sure as hell not going to pay effectively 25% more for long distance in exchange for trying out a new gadget that will surely provide far worse-quality calls.
Re:Bad for asynchronous rate lines (Score:1)
There is a product already out there for cable companies that takes one cable in and gives 4 phone lines, an ethernet connection, and 2-way digital TV. You can just bet that your local cable company would love you sign you up on this...
Re:Nice idea, but ... (Score:1)
Plus their is also the problem that the Bells invested billions and billions of dollars into proprietary switches, and that they can basically scraped them all because they cannot be adapted to IP. Softwitching, on the other hand, run on fairly common hardware, is completly flexible and run IP.
Not over the Internet (Score:4)
Big bandwidth providers like Level3 are beginning to provide softswitching technologies (you call your local gateway and your call is routed through the private network transparently).
As usual, the problem is the last mile, as the Baby Bells really don't want you to do that.
Thingies at staples. (Score:1)
I know that's not voice over IP or anything, but dammit, it'll save you cash. Is that the interest? The money or cool toys?
Stupid question.... forget this post
Actually 911 for voip works 100% (Score:1)
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:1)
My bad. I read it in SiliconValley.com via AvantGo. Which is the same parent paper as the Contra Costa Times, thus my extreme deja vu while reading the article.
Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:5)
There are still a few reasons not to give up your good ol' POTS line just yet though:
Dosn't Linux do this (Score:1)
Or maybe I'm wrong.
Re:Creative's VOIP Blaster (Score:1)
I didnt sign up with Innomedia yet though I think I want to play around with this thing for a while.
Does any on know if you need Innomedia software or just an account?
If anyone else has one of these send me an Email.
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:3)
So if that kind of thing worries you, it's reason enough to keep the land-line.
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:2)
As a matter of fact, I have - several times. There have been several times when (during peak usage), a long distance call will result in a message like "all the circuits are busy; please try again later", or a very fast "busy-signal" type tone (which the operators have told me means the same thing).
I want a phone that plugs into an ethernet jack (Score:2)
Nice idea, but ... (Score:2)
The reason why we're not seeing many successful IP Telephony systems is because these companies have to lease bandwidth from Telcos ... the same Telcos against which they are competing in the long distance market.
The technology already exists, but until a major Telco comes out in support of a provider (i.e., one of their subsidiaries), it's unlikely that these ventures will be successful.
I can't see why people would buy the rave. (Score:2)
Check out the facts:
Now, if you want Rave, you pay for the device, the monthly fee. Extra money if you run over your monthly alotment. You also pay for a router or whatever and broadband access.
GreyPoopon
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Local Cable Company to provide phone service (Score:3)
Re:State of the World (Score:1)
Open telephone networks? (Score:2)
I saw the Linksys router with the phone jack a few months ago and was intrigued enough to do some research. It turns out it really wasn't that cool, they pretty much just route you to some company who wants to be your long distance provider. But the existance of the box, the fact that these devices can already do all the hard work of IP telephony makes me wonder if anyone has looked into hacking them.
More specifically what I'm wondering about is whether it would be possible to set up a telephony server and have a group of these telephony boxes point to it rather than the company that sells them. It would provide a cheap, secondary form of communication that would be very easy to use. Picking up the receiver and pressing 5 on a spare phone on your desk could quickly connect you to a friend without tying up the main line. More interestingly, your server room could have a "red phone" that would ring up another server farm in another country.
So my question is, is anyone doing this stuff? Not a replacement for the phone companies, but an easy way to link these boxes together and form a small phone network?
Re:Legislation problems (Score:1)
Around here open the market means that other companies other than the monopolist telecom have access to licenses that allow them to deploy cabling and selling bandwidth to others. In any case the local loop here is government owned and only the the (ex-)monopolist telecom has access to it.
Legislation problems (Score:3)
That means that the use of this kind of equipment, netmeeting, yahoo messenger or any other program that allows voice communication is forbidden if you don't use one of the 11 (minus 2 that become our version of dot.com bombs) licensees networks.
Are any other countries like this ?
Phones... (Score:1)
Re:Don't abandon your POTS line yet... (Score:2)
Try SIP (Score:1)
Basically do a google search for SIP. One URL I know of off the top of my head is http://www.siphappens.com/
I think this stuff is mostly commercial now, but I imagine quite a bit of work is being done on SIP in the open source world to get it affordable. Most of the real expense is doing a linkup to the PSTN, but if you remain strictly IP costs should be reasonable as soon as the phone hardware is commoditized.
Re:Its not the bandwidth.... (Score:1)
Also, you would be surprised (I was shocked) how many of the current VoIP products use non-compressed codecs. I tried one that my company was developing over a 2B ISDN connection (bandwidth choked by a 115.2 serial port) and it was practically unusable (64K codec plus IP overhead was too much). I guess the hardware to do the compression made the phones too expensive. Hopefully that shit goes away.
Re:I want a phone that plugs into an ethernet jack (Score:1)
open source video server (Score:1)
Cordless VOIP phone anyone? (Score:1)
With broadband acess becoming more widespread, the networks in the home market are just maturing to the point that would make the technology feasible for the average user. Unfortunately, no one has developed a product that can be used by the average non-technical person.
Who wouldn't love to have a cordless phone that runs VOIP on encrypted 802.11b, with both POTS and Ethernet in the base?
chown -R us all_your_base
chgrp -R us all_your_base
We need a PERSONAL VoIP device - here's a proposal (Score:1)
The problem with all currently-available devices of this type is that they require you to use a service such as Net2Phone for most or all of your calls, at a per-minute charge. In certain situations, this is ridiculous. For example, if you are traveling and you need to place a call back to your home town, you may have a perfectly good computer and your personal phone line sitting at your home or office that could be used to facilitate the call. What you probably don't have is the hardware necessary to complete the call using your own phone line.
An article entitled Can the Internet take the place of a pair of copper wires? [timmins.net] (which was put online in response to a previous /. article [slashdot.org]!) makes the case that with the proper hardware, the Internet could be used to extend personal telephone lines. In this way, people could access their own personal or business telephone line from anywhere in the world. As the title implies, the idea is to use a pair of (as-yet-unbuilt) hardware devices, that would use the Internet as an underlying transport mechanism but would simulate (as closely as possible) a bare pair of copper wires to external telephone equipment.
Note that we are not talking about allowing "the public" to use your line - this would simply give you the ability to access a telephone line that you are already paying for, from locations other than the place where that line is terminated. For example, you could access your home phone line from the office, or vise versa. Or, you create a point-to-point "ringdown" circuit between two distant points, without having to get a private circuit from Ma Bell. How you use your "virtual copper pair" is up to you.
For those that understand telephone system terminology, the article makes the case that under certain circumstances, such a device could be used to provide the functional equivalent of at least four different types of service now only available (to most of us) from the phone company. These are Off-Premises Extensions (OPX) (also known as Exchange Service Extension (ESE)), Off-Premises Station (OPS), Foreign Exchange (FX), and Ringdown. The article even points out that it's completely legal to extend your own phone service in this way, thanks to a federal appeals court decision in 1990 (discussed in an archived TELECOM Digest article [mit.edu]).
What's needed is for someone to design and build these devices. I think whoever does it first will find that it's not at all difficult to sell these, provided that they are easy enough to install and configure that the average computer owner (or, at the very least, anyone with enough intelligence to install and configure a Network Interface Card) can do it.