> We'd ditch ADSL in a flash if there was another option.  UFB by July
> 2017.  Apparently.

The other problem with VoIP is a confusion of purpose.

VoIP might save money, but that's not the main reason for moving. 
Instead, VoIP increases your flexibility.

One of the downsides of VoIP is expecting to put your voice over the
public internet and have a low latency connection all the time.  We're
moderately lucky in NZ, because 2talk is only 14-17 ms away (UFB)

I don't care if my teenager's phone calls are a bit blah sometimes.  I
don't mind if telemarketeers sound worse than normal.

However, if you're depending on the voice service, then sharing multiple
voice calls on your main internet link is asking for a bad user
experience.

There are three options
1) Use a firewall/router that can prioritise traffic (I use pfsense)

2) Allocate a dedicated internet connection for your voice link.  Keep it
separate from the main network
2b) If you're on a UFB business connection, explore packet marking to make
use of the high priority component of your service.  Home UFB lacks this.

3) Talk to your ISP - see if you can buy a second vlan/pppoe link on your
existing UFB.  Some ISPs can do this on ADSL and VDSL if your link is an
EUBA which has prioritised voice traffic.




-- 
Criggie

http://criggie.org.nz/



_______________________________________________
Linux-users mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.canterbury.ac.nz/mailman/listinfo/linux-users

Reply via email to