2) The MagicJack device needs a Windows PC to run, and be always on. I would much prefer a device that plugs directly in to my router. Many people are using small cheap PCs for this purpose, but it still seems like overkill for what the MagicJack does.
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Of course, these days people are mostly ditching their landlines, and so MagicJack might be a bit old-school.
I use ooma at home and happy with it. www.ooma.com :smile:
Interesting. First I've seen of [ooma]. Looks cool.
1) Number portability -- I've had the same phone number for a very long time; I don't relish the idea of finding everyone in the world I communicate with and giving them the new number.
2) The MagicJack device needs a Windows PC to run, and be always on. I would much prefer a device that plugs directly in to my router. Many people are using small cheap PCs for this purpose, but it still seems like overkill for what the MagicJack does.
+1 what he sad I was in india doning the same thing lolHad issues with my first Magic jack. Went to wally world and use it in all countries to call the US. Pretty badass for a cost effective way to save. First phone bill in a 2 week span ran 1500+. After spending the 50+ dollars never looked back. I used Vonage and really never liked it. Skype was hit and miss being in a foreign country. I needed to make an emergency call and busted out my phone got online plugged in a socket and made a call from Korea to the US LOL.
=g=
lolololololI have been using magic jack for 6 months and I have grown a full 2 inches! Amazing thing.....Now I may suppliment with extenzzzzzzzz.:tongue:
On Fastrunner's advice I researched and purchased an Ooma. So far, it's awesome. It addresses exactly my two concerns above: my number ported hassle-free (although it did take about two weeks to complete, which they warned me about in advance); and it's just a pretty little box that sits quietly on my shelf next to my cable modem and router. Setting it up and activating it was brainless -- to steal a phrase, it all "just worked". Call quality is as good or better than my previous Comcast digital voice or my old school Ma Bell line.
$200 for the box, and you're done. No more phone bills.
Noob question. How does this work if you have a fax machine?
I have a great deal of experience with faxing and VoIP. Basically if you just do casual faxing, VoIP is typically OK. If you have someone sending you a fax, I'd just ask them to let you know to expect it. If you rely on faxing and it's business critical and/or if you have a fair volume of faxes, especially ones with many pages, VoIP is not the way to go.
Been waiting for MagicJack to get number porting approved and tested. They say they are beta testing now.
...will the main unit support the two cordless handsets?
Yes.
Anyone had a difficulty of keeping their phone numbers?
No.
Quality?
Good.
Thanks in advance.
Doug