I would almost buy this statement if it weren't for the fact that cell phone call quality is horrible. Add bluetooth headsets to the equation and windshear and I can't hear a blessed word some people are saying.
And this has not stopped people from using cell phones.

Consumers switch to VoIP for 3 reasons: cheaper, cheaper, cheaper.

Regards,

Peter


Tom DeReggi wrote:

The problem that people make is they try to measure (put a rating on) the call quality of a call, which is wrong. The correct way to measure VOIP quality is to measure the percentage of calls that can accomplish a defined level of quality. The quality varies based on where it is made to. And provider have no way to test to all possible destinations.

The advantage of telcos is that they can guarantee quality to more locations predictably. When I get a good VOIP link, it often is much better quality than my POTS line (analog versus digital), its just not all VOIP calls meet that quality.

Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband

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