SkyQube Squared Shakes Up International Calling 59
Max Matakino writes "CNet.co.uk has stumbled across a very interesting box indeed out at CeBIT: 'The SkyQube Squared from Qool Labs is a VoIP gateway that enables you to forward calls and messages made to your mobile phone or landline via SkypeOut to another number anywhere in the world.' This means that if you receive a call to your house phone while you're in China, you can get it forwarded to a Chinese cell phone or telephone for the relatively very cheap price of a SkypeOut call. I'm guessing wireless carriers aren't going to be happy about this one."
Asterisk, Cheap Calls (Score:5, Informative)
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I can voip in to my home machine from anywhere then bounce the call out my home phone line which I have a very good long distance package on (cable company provided voip actually...). This effectively lets me access the local telephone network plus make long distance calls from anywhere I have an internet connection.
Technology is wonderful.
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Make SIP not Skype (Score:2)
Yes indeed, Asterisk FTW.
While Skype is popular (I occasionally use it on my mobile phone), its proprietary model is annoying and limiting. Here in AU, voip is really starting to take off, and it's all based on SIP, the official standard for this sort of thing. From my normal home phone, I can make free calls to Asterisk setups or any other SIP client, including friends & family's voip phones, and PCs running Windows Messenger, Jabber or GTalk (via gateways if necessary). I can call overseas to any fi
In any case (Score:1)
My wife and I both have mobile phones on the same account. We often call each other when one is overseas. The cost of the outgoing side of the call can be very cheap with any given VOIP solution, but the mobile phone that is away from home (Australia in my case) gets slugged with a massive charge from Vodafone to receive the call.
Re:Latency? - three actually (Score:2)
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Umm, no. Skypeout calls to mobile phones are far from free. Cheaper than your wireless carrier, but definitely not free.
(This from someone who is making a lot of Skypeout calls to mobile phones at the moment.)
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Why are you doing that? There are much cheaper ways to call mobiles.
One of the easier ways is to pick a service from Betamax [backsla.sh] (link is to a 3rd-party price-comparison grid that will help you pick the Betamax service with the best rates to your destinations).
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Because:
(1) I am in Australia, my wife is currently in the UK
(2) I spend days at a time away from home myself
(3) I have an absolute requirement that the application I use to call from has to be cross-platform
(4) Sometimes it is just not worth the trouble of shopping around SIP providers just to save what amounts to a few cents.
I could probably go on at considerable length. Yes, I know Skype is far from perfect, and no, I'm not enthused
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(for most situations this is trival/subtrivial but...)
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Unmetered local calls, yes. There are exceptions - New York City charged 11 cents per call, regardless of length, when I was there.
Long-distance (between US states) charges have dropped steadily so that now traditional carriers are offering flat
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For a little over 2 years Verizon has provided a phone service for about $39 per month that allows you to connect to USA, Canada, Mexico and a few other countries with no call charges.
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Definitely cool (Score:2, Interesting)
If the goal is cheap international calling... (Score:1, Redundant)
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*) Great Firewall of China
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On the contrary... (Score:2, Insightful)
It really won't make a difference. When you forward a call from a mobile you're still using your airtime so your provider gets what they want. Overseas roaming charges originate from the expensive roaming agreements with the overseas provider, not from your carrier. It's the provider in Thailand or where ever whose network you're using that charges your carrier for the usage.
Cool product, btw.
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Most cell-phone companies are extremely protective of anything they seem to think is theirs (phones they sell you, SIM cards, etc). They will be unhappy if you get it to work.
The problem that arises is most cell-providers use a white-list of ESNs. For example, if you move your SIM card from a Verizon phone to an unbranded, direct-from-manufacturer phone, your will get rejected of service because the ESN isn't in that whitelist.
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I did exactly that with my Cingular phone. Signed up for new service, used the SIM in my el crappo free phone just to test it, then moved the SIM to my unlocked RAZR (that I bought in Eastern Europe, no less). No problems. I've since used the SIM in oth
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But even so, according to the article you pop your SIM card into the SkyQube to get it working. That being the case, seems Verizon customers are SOL anyways.
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Not sure where you live, but in Canada, here if you get unlocked phone, all you have to do is just pop in the sim card and way you go.
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I don't know about Verizon, but I've only ever used Cingular with cheap phones purchased in Asia. No problems at all.
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My understanding is that is illegal. AT&T tried that years ago. They claimed that any phone on the phone system not owned by AT&T could break it. They lost some court cases over it, and now you can not be prevented from putting anything you want on any network, as long as they can't show it causes harm. From my understanding, this includes wireless networks. That's why they lock down the handsets they sell to not work on
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Have you noticed that the overseas provider is also a wireless carrier? So yes, wireless carriers are going to hate this.
To look at it the other way, when someone from this overseas provider is in my country, my provider in turn charges their pr
Skype? (Score:1, Informative)
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'course you have to have a U3 drive, but they're easy to come by and extremely useful...
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Still wating for video on linux version of skype.
2c
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Poor Slashvertisement title (Score:3, Insightful)
The right title should have been "SkyQube Squared shakes Up International Roaming charges".
This article was especially poor in substance and novelty.
And don't expect to see this thing explode the sales chart. It'll most probabl be +200 dollars given that it has GSM radio.
Geeks only. 2000 units shipped tops. 800 will be sold and we'll all call it a day.
Re:Mod Parent Informative (Score:2)
What makes matters worse is they are married to skype/ebay.
They've already flushed a couple of suitcases of cash down the toilet, I'm not sure why they didn't just colo some voip servers in specific markets they were targeting. At this point VOIP servers and POTS bridges are not rocket science. From there a simple bridge to the customers skype account and you are done.
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The closest to it is having your local cell forward to another that is a skypeIn or Vonage or land-line and have that processed by a computer and sent via VoIP to some other country. However, doing it that way, at least with my provider, uses double minutes (there are two calls in a forward, one to the h
I want my Trixbox + Nokia N95 (Score:2, Informative)
Sorry folks, but for my time and money, I want total client/server control. So I'll go to Nerd Vittles [nerdvittles.com] and download myself a Trixbox (in a CentOS VMware image). It'll do it all, and the docs there are great, including how to migrate to real hardware should you want.
For SIP (etc.) clients, I'll take a Nokia N95 please, which is a fancier version than the nearly 1.5 year old Nokia N80i, but with better specs.: DVD video plus GPS/maps. (Otherwise, the N80i, for about 375 euros) will connect you via 802.11 to
How long before its reversed? (Score:2)
Relative Very Cheap (Score:1)
Has advantages, if you could actually get one (Score:2)
Xcelis, too. (Score:2)
$350 + $10/mo on Cingular, for indicative pricing. Three years payba