I prefer to keep life a lot more simple than that.  I have no idea what this
thing is for.  My landline and my cell phone provide me with all I need in
phone service.

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Scott Howell
Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 5:35 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Ooma Phone Service

 

  

Hi folks,

Well this is sort of handy man related in that I recently purchased the Ooma
VOIP phone service and have been trying it out for a couple of days. Overall
it seems to live up to all the hype. I am curious first if any of you have
used it or know someone that has used it and do you know if anyone has ever
connected a satellite receiver to it?
I have a number of options available to me and one of those is to keep the
most basic landline service and have the Ooma device share that service. So,
most calls accept toll-free calls go out over the Ooma line from what I can
tell, but all other calls go out on the Ooma. THe advantage of this of
course offers fail-over capability. The other option is to split my phone
lines off from the lines coming into the house and what this allows is for
me to take a dry-loop for the DSL line and tie that directly to one phone
jack in the home and the other jack would allow me to possibly serve all the
phones in the house just from the Ooma device. I'm not entirely sure how all
the magic works in the box, but let me further explain something.
The Ooma hub has a few ports and just to give you an idea how this works,
there you connect this between your dsl/cable modem and your router. You can
attach it directly to your router, but apparently the benefit of putting it
before the router is the ability to prioritize voice calls over large file
transfers and the like. Now there are two RJ11 phone jacks and one is marked
phone and the other is marked wall port. How you apparently hook this up
regardless of whether you have dial tone is the phone goes to the phone jack
and provides a simulated dial tone and the wall port goes to the jack on the
wall. There is a relay in the box that apparently can detect dial tone and
my assumption is that based on the type of call, the unit can switch between
the VOIP and copper service. Apparently if you disconnect the dial tone and
you want to have other phones on the VOIP service, you purchase what amounts
to a satellite that you connect in the same manner. What I was thinking is
wether it would be possible to skip the satellites and just reverse the
connection or better yet just connect the wall jack to the phone port and
share the dial tone with all the phones. I know of course that isn't
supported and would mean I'd have to likely split the DSL line from all
other lines in the house, but just giving the idea some thought and wanted
to see what others thought.

tnx,





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