Resurrected Full-Screen VoIP Phones 92
An anonymous reader writes "Looking for a suitable VoIP phone, I came across these Full-Screen Thin-Client Phones. Not only do they do voice, but they also have a 480x640 screen running at 65K colors and run a number of apps remotely via VNC. They seem to allow a lot more functionality than normal phones, and look really cool too. The site says they have 70 phones running in their office. This seems the way forward for telephony-computer convergence in the 21st century. A document at the end of the page explains their approach and has some cool pictures as well."
The question is.. (Score:5, Informative)
The Broadband Phone (BBPhone) is basically a Strong-ARM 1100, with 8MB of flash, 32MB of RAM, touchscreen, 10Mbps Ethernet and a sound card running a derivative of the Linux 2.2 kernel.
w00t!
5 Years Late (Score:5, Funny)
Better late than never, I guess!
Re:5 Years Late (Score:1)
Re:5 Years Late (Score:2)
Re:5 Years Late (Score:2)
Re:5 Years Late (Score:4, Informative)
They promised us more than that ... (Score:4, Interesting)
With this affordable video phone, now all I need is a practical hover car and society's promises of things I would have by the year 2000 will be complete.
What about common supersonic civilian transport, robots to do our house cleaning and upkeep, and a standard 20 hour work week.
We were promised all of these things, had one taken away (the Concord, which never really fulfilled the promise but was more of a teaser), and certainly don't seem to be getting our 20 hour workweek anytime soon.
Don't let them sidetrack you from the other promises by giving you a flying car! You'll still need to get your pilot's license to fly it, and you'll still be working a 60 hour week!
Re:They promised us more than that ... (Score:2)
They're all happening (Score:2)
As for the 20 hour work week, well... those 60 hours you presently work? You're spending at least 40 of them as an unpaid serf of the taxman. That's where the 20 hour work week went: it went to Washington. To get it back, elect a Libertarian.
Article Text Without FUD (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Article Text Without FUD (Score:2)
"Oh look, a computer that can also act as a telly-phone and dial numbers! Let's get rid of this dated DSL connection and go wardialing!"
Great... Another thin client for the home. (Score:2, Insightful)
Sprinkle in a HTPC..
add a pinch of x10
You have a hella integrated house.
Actually the HTPC could be the server.. sweet.
Finally (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Finally (Score:2)
Re:Finally (Score:2)
Re:Finally (Score:2)
Go Linux go...! (Score:1, Offtopic)
Prototypes? (Score:5, Insightful)
Dan East
Re:Prototypes? (Score:5, Informative)
But they're more than prototypes, the phones work really well even six years after being built (mainly due to their thin-client architecture, as only the servers need to be upgraded to run more complex services, not the edge phone hardware).
It's a bit of a shock to see this randomly show up on Slashdot, but for those interested readers, here's a WIP paper [recoil.org] about what we're doing with them these days (using the Active Bat [att.com] location system to migrate mobile phone calls via Bluetooth to the nearest environmental phone among other things).
As I said, the paper is very much WIP, and is being hacked up after being freshly rejected from a conference so the link is liable to disappear
As far as I know, no commercially available VoIP phone uses VNC these days, which is a real pity as its a really neat way to offer easily upgradable services to the end user (forget running mobile code on the edge device, compute power is cheap these days).
Re:Prototypes? (Score:2)
The window behind my browser is a VNC session over a VPN to work... the VNC server has been up for months now. It's a robust bit o' code that I agree should be used more widely.
Thanks for the additional info, it's good to hear about the labs working on yet more cool tech.
- Leo
Re:Prototypes? (Score:2)
Re:Prototypes? (Score:3, Informative)
The correct link to the department is:
Laboratory for Communication Engineering [cam.ac.uk], and the correct name is Rip Sohan (sorry!)
Re:Prototypes? (Score:2)
Yeah, that's actually a pretty neat idea. I just modified one of my web apps at work to work with the Cisco IP phones, which are all XML-based (and not very smart about parsing certain things). Being able to set up a VNC session to a server running the
Re:Prototypes? (Score:1)
Re:Prototypes? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd assume that someone will latch onto this idea on a more common platform a lot sooner than later. The inclusion of VNC expands what you can do, too.
Imagine this: Those "phones" could be outfitted with higher-quality sound. As you walk by one (ie. RFID or something of that sort), it l
Run apps on your telephone? (Score:3, Informative)
The new Vonage WiFi phone is the closest thing to something like this that will actually have potential. Around here, there are a lot of WiFi points that are free. I can go to almost any of the locally owned coffee shops and get free WiFi access. Now that has some potential, emphasis on some.
Re:Run apps on your telephone? (Score:3, Interesting)
WiFi seems orthogonal to th
Re:Run apps on your telephone? (Score:2)
One of the example apps in the SDK was one that added a file photo and LDAP information about them.
Most of these features are totally useless most of the time, but it looks cool t
Interesting... (Score:1)
Re:Interesting... (Score:3, Interesting)
They can get bogged down running an app.
Do you want a phone that is as reliable as your computer? Think about it. It is not good to put all your eggs in one basket.
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Maybe someday but for now I will stick to a separate phone.
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
Or to call my good friends at Comcast when the Internet is down
I Want My AT&T (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I Want My AT&T (Score:1)
Re:I Want My AT&T (Score:2)
Re:I Want My AT&T (Score:3, Interesting)
In this case because the US government decided to kill it. Read the history of it here [bellsystemmemorial.com] That's why you don't have your innovative AT&T anymore, the feds killed it pretty much out of spite. Then they killed it some more by allowing the Baby Bells to raise the rates they charged AT&T for connecting calls into what is essentially the network AT&T built in the first place! Which is why AT
Re:I Want My AT&T (Score:2)
Quality? (Score:1)
Vonage nitpick (Score:1)
VOIPix ?? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think it would be most excellent if someone were to make up a knoppix distro that only exists to be a VOIP client, such as Damn Small Linux doing VOIP..
If someone were to come up with something to turn old POS pc's into dedicated voip boxes that would be pretty interesting..
Just my
Re:VOIPix ?? (Score:1)
70watt telephones? (Score:2)
Re:70watt telephones? (Score:2)
Q:70watt telephones? vs 100watt lightbulb? (Score:2)
Re:VOIPix ?? (Score:1)
and
http://www.automated.it/asterisk/ [automated.it]Asterisk Live!
are two bootable distros for machine that have an asterisk voip/PBX card in them.
Re:VOIPix ?? (Score:2)
Heh heh.
Re:VOIPix ?? (Score:1)
Beaucoup.
- From your friends in the Rechtschreibungmacht
Re:Microsoft will never like thin clients (Score:3, Informative)
1. WebTV/msntv [msntv.com]
2. Thin clients fall directly into the MS mindset. Everything runs off the server, and you subscribe to a 'service', perpetually. No 'piracy' allowed, and they have ultimate control over your desktop, and your wallet. Stop paying, your PC doesn't work anymore.
Microsoft (and Oracle and Sun and all the others) will 'like' whatever model brings the most profit. If they can make thin clients work in the mond of the user, they will.
Re:Microsoft will never like thin clients (Score:2)
You're right, but there are additional considerations...
First, the major software vendors would love to move the market to a subscription service model, but it may be a better model for the consumer as well.
Take Microsoft, for instance. When MS sold a copy of Office 95, they made their money once. If there was no compelling reason to upgrade, then they could never make another dime selling Office to that customer. So MS's self interest is to get the Office 95 customer to buy Office 98, 2000, XP, 2003
Similar cheap platforms to experiment with: (Score:3, Interesting)
When I first heard about it, the idea of what was essentially a touchscreen terminal attached wirelessly to your desktop seemed to open a huge number of possibilities, VoIP telephony being one of them. Ultimately, Smart Displays failed - one of the main reasons being the price and the simultaneous release of the Tablet PC which was similar, yet gave much more VFM. The SD tended to be based around CE.NET running on an ARM chip with around 32MB of RAM if I remember correctly.
So, although these 70-odd phones at the Cambridge labs are unique (you can't buy them commercially), there exists out there a large number of devices with ARM chips, touchscreens and WiFi that are capable of doing this kind of thing. You can probably pick them up cheap now so modifying a secondhand SD device may be a neat way to get started...
Nice, but... (Score:2)
Re:Nice, but... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Nice, but... (Score:2)
Oh well.
Perhaps.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Perhaps.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Perhaps.... (Score:2)
Yep! Sadly I had the same conversation with them over and over again until I started jacking my stereo into the receiver and playing full blast random Dead Milkmen hits or some random New York 976 porn.
TM: Vinyl siding?
Tape: Lick my feet... lick my feet with some feeling you bad slave! Do it now! Do it now!
TM: What the?!?!
Tape: No I want you to masturbate in that fresh maid apron.
TM: OH my God
Tape: Now l
Re:Perhaps.... (Score:2)
Major telemarketing operations nowadays are all computer-controlled, which means the individual (ahem) "sales associate" probably doesn't have any idea what time it is where he or she is calling, and no control over it anyway. But honestly it wouldn't be hard for the dialer program to look up the current local time and just skip numbers that are outside the proscribed times. I'm sure the software
Re:Perhaps.... (Score:2)
Most areas have test numbers you can dial. For example 253-565-0040 is a nice one that says "the call you have made requires a coin deposit. -0047 is the "The number you have dialed is not in service". They are worth sampling and playing to bloody telemarketers. I recently upgraded to voicemail software and the software is rigged to play "this call requires a coin deposit".
Also amusing is 3-way back to their own number and you get two telemarketers chat
It's better... (Score:1, Funny)
Where they intended to be voip or just web phones? (Score:3, Interesting)
The voice modem option of the ones I have should be fast enough to do voip (if they had an ethernet interface but that never happened either) or run linux but I never got around to hacking them in any useful way.
There was lots of technology from a few years back that was hunting for a market that they never found.
Re:Where they intended to be voip or just web phon (Score:2)
PLANT!!! (Score:1)
reminds me... (Score:1)
Re:reminds me... (Score:2, Interesting)
Bandwith Usage (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh..... (Score:1)