The Grouse
Wherein The Grouse cuts the telco cord and gladly binds himself to the future of phones


The financials

Including voice mail and the luxury of keeping my number privately listed, my landline comes in at $33.45 per month. Skype to Skype calls are free, but if I want to call phone numbers I need to subscribe to a service called SkypeOut. If I want phone numbers to be able to call me, I need to pay for an online phone number. If this sounds confusing, it’s really not—the Skype website holds your hand through the whole process. When all is said and done, I’m paying a total of $6.95 per month for a package equivalent to my landline set-up. Skype is already tugging at my heartstrings . . . but will it work as well as my regular phone does?

The experience

Within 15 minutes of signing up, I’ve got the client installed and my contacts imported. If you’ve ever used an instant messenger, the Skype client will look familiar: Contacts are all listed in a little window and double clicking on them initiates a call, which I use a headset for. If a contact is also a Skype user, I can text, video or voice chat with them. I can also send text messages to phones. Easy peasey.

While I choose to set up a voicemail box, I could just as easily have Skype calls forwarded to my cellphone instead. Since I’m paying for an online number, I choose to have those digits pop up on other people’s Caller IDs. So far, so good.

However, I’m not much of a headset guy. The calls I’m making sound surprisingly clear to me, but to others I sound like I’m calling from inside of a tunnel. Plus, I’m chained to my computer using software to dial numbers. The experience isn’t very phone-like, which was supposed to be the whole point of this exercise.

Philips VOIP841 : The Grouse's new best friend.  Philips
Enter the Philips VOIP841 Internet phone, which goes for $129 on Skype’s site. Without trying to sound too much like a gushing teenage girl, I have to say that I love this phone. It plugs into my home network without fuss and when I sign into Skype, my contacts are automatically downloaded. From there, I simply select a name and choose to call them with SkypeOut. I’m still in a bit of disbelief over the quality of the calls. While the headset/computer experience was less than satisfying, this phone is a real phone. And believe me, I put it though a gauntlet of punishing tests. A 10-minute call to Mom and Dad went off without a hitch. Skype even achieved the holy grail of telephony: a 36-minute customer service call to help fix a finicky printer.

If you want to test out Skype without completely abandoning your regular phone, good news: The Philips also connects to your traditional landline. When you dial a number or choose a contact, you’re asked if you want to make the call via Skype or Landline. Genius.

The gripes

You didn’t think I’d gone soft, did you? Where to begin . . .

It would be nice if my Skype contacts and address book stayed in sync. If I add or edit a contact in the Address Book program, I’d like a way for it to automatically show up in Skype. Not happening. I also have a beef with the way the Philips VOIP phone handles contacts. After settling into Skype, I spent a nice chunk of time organizing my contacts into two groups: Business and Personal. However, when the Philips phone downloads my contacts, the groups aren’t there, requiring me to slog through hundreds of contacts to locate the one I’m after.

6 Comments

If you think Skype is the Answer...........Think Again............check out the fastes growing phone company in the nation, Magicejack. No kidding, I was looking for something like this for a while, I own one now and think it is great! I keep my phone number anywhere I take it and the service is only 19.99 a year with discounts if you add years. I read the story on Cnn a source that I trust as much as Popsci. I am not a jerk trying to get people to buy this, I just want people to benefit like I have. Its great and the quality is there.

Yet more comm fragmentation. Started with the breakup of Ma Bell, and continued via cellphones and now VOIP.

Biggest question I have is how you find others. The old 411 really fades fast as you get into the cell/VOIP area. So, now you have privacy, but many people and businesses that you might want to hear from can't find you. Same goes for when you want to find a long lost bud, or locate a relative. ( I was prety happy to find my aunt after Katrina)

Not to mention that everybody gets back to the telco network for a lot of the calls. Skye to cell, Skype/Cell to landline require some landline network. As landlines are lost due to competition, odd little connectivity gaps will probably occur.

Then there's the old power outs. My cell MIGHT still work during a power outage, but my internet probably won't. Say what you will about the landlines, they're pretty reliable. They
have their own power source, and are generally available when the power grid is down.

I'm not a luddite, I love tech. But, I'm not at all sure that this is an advancement.

Hi Tom,

That's a cool article that you did on skype. Obviously as you can see from my screen name, I'm biased towards jaxtr's phone service, but I wanted to see what kinds of experiences you've had around the phone services that don't require downloads or special equipment like jaxtr.

Also, the voip space is filling up with a number of great solutions like skype, but I wonder where you see the tipping point where landlines disappear from the equation in a big way. Or do you not see that tipping point ever happening and that a co-existence will be struck up between, mobile, landline, and voip?

As you said, the history of world-wide and local service outages at Skype is troubling. Equally troubling is the lack to Customer Support or Technical Support. Something goes wrong, and you find that they have NO phone number for support, no email address, no chat (not even Skype chat)... the only contact method is a "support ticket" to be filled out on a web page, and the MINIMUM response time for that is FOUR DAYS. When you have a problem with your phone, can you wait four days for a response?

Likewise, Skype has a long history of taking customers money and then blocking their account, and once again your only recourse is the support ticket with FOUR DAYS response time. This is particularly common if you are traveling and try to "top up" your Skype account - so the next time you take a trip, would you like to get halfway around the world and find that Skype has decided not to let you phone home, and they won't even answer your questions as to why?

There are other excellent phone replacements. Gizmo5 has very good service, excellent prices and good customer support, for example.

bazone

from Belmont, CA

sounds great ... anyone know if your computer phone number contacts imported to the skype client transfer over to the philips phone? ... I love the idea of having my contacts all synchronised and being able to maintain them on the computer

I've used VOIP for some time now, and there is nothing to worry about in cases where your broadband goes down.

I live in Houston and we lost power for a week during Hurricane Ike. While our neighbors with phone service were fine, we only had our cell phones. They were down for about 24-36 hours, then we had intermittent service for two weeks until the tower nearest us was repaired. Basically, we had to go out to the curb to make a call; the service could no longer make it into the house.

It wasn't the end of the world, because everyone was in the same boat. The real change isn't from landline to VOIP. It is from wired to wireless. The amount I ever use a phone at home is rather limited. I use it on the road, at the store, at the office. Most people were back to work before they had electricity restored. Having crappy cell service for the month after the storm was far more of an imposition than a week without home phone service.



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