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VoIP: Vonage to go mobile
The wonderful world of Wi-Fi...
By Ben Charny
Published: Monday 16 May 2005
Vonage, a provider of internet-based calling services, is testing wireless routers - a sign the company is on the verge of debuting a mobile offering.
The ongoing customer trials involve a new Linksys Wi-Fi router that Vonage could market along with its calling plans, according to an email sent to customers. Vonage has in the past acknowledged that its customers are also testing a handset equipped with a Wi-Fi antenna and radio.
With the special router and handset, individual customers would be free to roam about their home or office, without being tethered to a modem or phone jack and without a connection to a laptop or desktop computer. Vonage could also market the routers to hot spot providers such as Boingo Wireless for installation in airports, coffee shops and other such locations where wireless hubs have slowly begun to appear.
Current Wi-Fi hot spots often pose problems for VoIP users. In theory, someone should be able to walk into a Wi-Fi-enabled cafe, fire up a laptop, log on to the internet and start dialling. But that now requires technical know-how and configuration hassles which most consumers don't want to deal with. The new routers are designed to do most of the heavy lifting.
Vonage and many others among the new breed of telephone companies using voice over Internet Protocol, are trying to cash in on mobility in the same way mobile phone operators have. Skype, a Vonage competitor, said it's working on a Wi-Fi handset similar to Vonage's.
Support for Wi-Fi continues to grow, a positive sign as Vonage and other VoIP operators prepare their own services. On Friday, mobile phone operator Nextel Communications, which is in the midst of being purchased by rival Sprint, began offering a $40-per-month service providing unlimited access to 7,000 hot spots run by partners Boingo and Wayport.
Ben Charny writes for CNET News.com
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