Review: Ten Ways To Save on Calling Costs
The cost of making phone calls has been dropping rapidly in the last few years. whether you want take full advantage of that, you’ll need to try some new things, considering the phone companies aren’t going to thrust savings on you. Here are 10 tips on how to cut the cost of your phone service.
Several services let you use your home broadband line to manufacture and receive calls. Some of them are aimed at replacing your landline outright, while others are designed as complements.
- Vonage is the most widely advertised replacement for the home phone line, and the price is more appealing than before. It just squeezed free calls to more than 60 countries into its standard $25-per-month plan, which already included free domestic calling.
Vonage sends you an adapter that connects to your broadband line and your old phone. The setup requires that you know where your broadband modem is and how to
But whether you’re not a big overseas caller, there are cheaper alternatives, and in my evaluating, long-running problems with audio quality and reliability persist, particularly for universal calls.
- Ooma sells a device that’s similar to Vonage’s adapter, but once you’ve plunked down $250 for it, domestic calls are free. worldly calls are billed at low per-minute rates. Ooma’s audio quality and reliability are much better than Vonage’s, but slightly below that of a regular phone line. Like Vonage, Ooma will let you use your old phone number (for a $40 transfer fee). The adapter works as an answering machine too, and you can access your voice mail through a Web browser as well.
There’s a new model of the Ooma device coming soon that can act…
Original post by dhiram
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