Hi BAWUG's,

Can you change my mail address for your Lists from [EMAIL PROTECTED] to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] because I would like some of my techs to join in on this
great info.

Thanks 
Dean

We have also trialed the net2phone but don't find it works to well when out
of the US area. We have trialed in South E Asia and found the Echo too much
to handle. We tried many times when in Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand to
call Australia and the US but the delay was very long an made it very
difficult to have a general conversation. However, we also tried the Skype
P2P and Worldvox VoIP software phones to work quite well in all trials. We
have ordered one of the Worldvox USB VoIP phones to trial as well and wil
update when it arrives. We are in the middle of connecting a network of
Quintum VoIP boxes from Indonesia to Australia connecting branch and HQ
offices together from PBX to PBX using our WISP network as the backbone on
this end and a carrier on the other.

Regards to all
Dean
------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Sun, 18 Jul 2004 23:45:51 -0700
From: Kathy Giori <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [BAWUG] comments on WiFi VOIP phones?
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed

 > i'm looking at WiFi VOIP phones and i would appreciate it if anyone
 > here can comment on them, specifically compatibility, radio
 > performance and power consumption. this would be for use with a
 > consumer VOIP provider like vonage or packet8 and consumer AP hardware
 > like linksys, d-link, netgear.

i have a trial going with net2phone, testing their wifi handset with the 
Sputnik AP160 access point. i think the handset works great, but i 
haven't stress tested it for the details that you mention above. it 
works with any open AP, but will fail with public-access-controlled 
ones, such as T-mobile or wayport. fortunately, although the AP160 
normally authenticates using a captive portal username/password (in a 
redirected browser page), the phone can't do that, so for now we use 
centralized MAC address authentication, for the handsets or other 
non-interactive devices. the captive portal is used to authenticate 
everyone else.

if you're in the bay area and want to do that type of stress testing, 
you're welcome to borrow it and gather those data to share with the rest 
of us. :)

kathy giori
sputnik, inc.
http://www.sputnik.com

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