-- 
-Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have -
-happened but none stranger than this. Does your driver's license say Organ
-Donor?Black holes are where God divided by zero. Listen to me! We are all-
-individuals! What if this weren't a hypothetical question? [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 22:10:52 -0500
From: chasfs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

For anyone who's interested in telling Verizon to take a hike, read on...
Bon Vonage, Baby Bells
A new Internet service means you don't need the phone company anymore.
By Peter Rojas
Posted Tuesday, December 17, 2002, at 8:15 AM PT
A new service called Vonage <http://www.vonage.com/> makes using your
telephone over the Internet as easy as picking up the phone and dialing.
You simply plug the same phone you have now into a little adapter box that
connects to your DSL or cable modem (OK, through a router and then to your
modem), and you get a dial tone. That's it. There are no special phones to
use, no talking through a PC using a microphone, no weird lag time or
decrease in call quality. Technically, you don't even need a computer to
use Vonage-all you need is a broadband connection. And you can even keep 
your phone number. All of which adds up to something important: Vonage is 
the first Internet telephone service that could credibly replace your 
regular phone line. It turns your telephone into just another Internet
application, like e-mail or instant messenger.
For $40 a month, Vonage gives you unlimited local and long-distance calls,
along with free voice mail, caller ID, call forwarding, and call waiting.
A cheaper version of the service costs $25.99 a month and includes just 
500 minutes of long distance. (It's 3.9 cents a minute after the 500 
minutes are used up.) With the average American household paying about $36 
just for local phone service, Vonage looks like a pretty good deal. Of 
course, you have to make all your calls over the Internet, something that 
doesn't yet appeal to most people, assuming they're even aware that such a 
thing is possible. But that's partly because every previous Internet 
telephone service, from Net2Phone <http://web.net2phone.com/> to Dialpad
<http://www.dialpad.com/> to PhoneFree <http://www.phonefree.com/>, has
had some catch: You couldn't receive calls, or you had to use a special 
kind of phone, or you could call only other people who were online at the 
same time.
But with Vonage, Internet users with a high-speed connection (28 percent
of the country and growing) really don't need their local phone company
anymore. Granted, people have been discovering this for some time. Last
year, the total number of land lines in the United States declined 4.9
percent. A small but growing number of households-3 million, according to
the Federal Communications Commission-have opted to go with just cellular
phones, and there are four new cellular subscribers for every new land
line installed.
But cell phones are not as cost effective as Vonage for people who need to
make a lot of phone calls during the day. If you need to make, say, a
half-hour of long-distance calls each weekday, doing that on a cell phone
can be expensive. Plus, the quality of cell-phone connections is still
pretty low. Vonage calls, however, sound just like calls made over a land
line.
But like a cell phone, Vonage is portable: The service routes all your
calls to an IP address in the adapter rather than to a physical phone 
jack, so you can make (and receive) an unlimited number of calls anywhere 
you can find an Ethernet port, as long as you take your Vonage adaptor and 
a telephone with you. If you move, there's no need to change your number. 
Even if you move overseas, you can keep your U.S. phone number. And if 
that's not enough to convince you, how about this: Because Vonage is 
classified by the FCC as a data service rather than a phone service, there 
is only one annoying tax or surcharge to pay, a 3 percent federal excise tax.
There are other reasons why people would prefer Vonage to a cellular
phone. For instance, TiVo users can use Vonage to allow their TiVo to make 
its daily call. In addition, all calls to other Vonage customers are free, 
so if you have family in, say, Germany, you can give them a Vonage adapter 
(as long as they have the required high-speed Internet connection), and 
you can talk to them to your heart's content without paying an extra 
nickel. And if you'd rather not talk to them quite that much, Vonage's 
international rates are competitive: 5 cents a minute to the U.K. and 
Canada, 7 cents a minute to Japan, 34 cents a minute to India, to cite 
only a few examples. 

Right now, Vonage has about 6,000 customers, but the company hopes that
number will grow to 100,000 by the end of 2003. In fact, Forrester
Research estimates that by 2006 more than 4 million homes will have
abandoned their local phone companies for services like Vonage-more than
the 3 million who are expected to abandon the Baby Bells for cell phones
by that date. Consequently, expect the phone companies to use some of
their lobbying muscle in Washington to push for some sort of regulation
and taxation of Voice Over Internet Protocol services like Vonage. Let's
hope they don't succeed. Vonage means that you can finally call up Verizon
or Pacific Bell or Ameritech and tell them you don't need them or their
poor customer service, inflated prices, and bloated bureaucracies. So,
pick up the phone.

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