Is there another example of a term in history that has such a bad connotation to it like VoIP? And that then took a turn and became a positive term?
VoIP has such a bad rep that you have to follow with, "VoIP is really not what you may have heard or experienced..." I am just wondering if there is an alternative? What jargon do you use when selling VoIP based services? Cheers, Bruce Nikzad - Add me on Linked <http://ca.linkedin.com/in/brucenikzad> www.SharpCall.ca www.EntrepreneursDen.ca On Thu, Aug 9, 2012 at 9:45 PM, Marc Carrafiello <[email protected]>wrote: > You know what I get a lot of? > > "Wow, you use voip? But the calls sound so clear." > > I then explain that I use VOIP within the corporate LAN (2 offices, 1 PBX), > but use a PRI for my PSTN connection. Even this late in the game, I still > don't like what I see (and hear) about SIP trunking over the public > internet from some of the more well known players. I would trust SIP over > a dedicated circuit, but not over the public internet; there's just too > much that can go wrong once those little packets exit my network. > > IMHO, PSTN with digital interconnects (ie., PRI not Analogue) is the way to > go, and unless the whole country switches to VOIP type services, the > concept of a PSTN is here to stay. > > -Marc > > > On Thu, Aug 9, 2012 at 8:41 PM, James Knott <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > Reza - Voipernetics wrote: > > > >> ok... PSTN = Public Services Telephone Network -- works in both Wireless > >> mode and Copper physical line mode. > >> given PSTN is here to stay. > >> > > > > Ummm... Public Switched Telephone Network. That switched as opposed to > > dedicated circuits. > > > > > > > > ------------------------------**------------------------------**--------- > > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > > > > >
