Is VOIP reliable enough for the business world?

TheoPetro

Banned
Nov 30, 2004
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I know next to nothing about this tech and was curious about for our offices.

We have a 3mb/? connection currently if that makes a difference. Only need ~3-4 lines right now but may need more in the future.

Who are the best providers and how reliable are they?

Is this a reliable cost effective solution yet, or is it still too new?

If you guys could point me in the direction to research it I would really appreciate it.

Thanks
 

erwos

Diamond Member
Apr 7, 2005
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VOIP? I have a VOIP phone right next to me on my desk here at work. We're a Fortune 500 company. It works just like any other phone. It looks like Avaya gear, for what that's worth, but I don't know the backend. I doubt you'll have a problem with any of the major providers.

Now whether your _connection_ is reliable enough is a different story. I'd be weary of implementing VOIP on any line without a service level agreement unless you can tolerate outages at the worst possible times (that's when it'll happen!).
 

DeeKnow

Platinum Member
Jan 28, 2002
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If you get something professional like a Cisco, I bet you cannot tell from voice quality that you're using VOIP. add in the rock bottom cost, and the hundreds of additional features, and its a no brainer if you have good and reliable bandwidth

however, like the previous poster said, do not rely on VOIP as your only telephone option. that could be risky
 

almach1

Senior member
Sep 3, 2005
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what matters more i think is your internet connectivity. also weather or not it's hosted or not.
 

DeeKnow

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Jan 28, 2002
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I witched to voip about a year ago... since we live overseas and I travel a lot for work, we used to average almost $ 200 -300 a month in telephone bills. Last few months ?? LOL i havent gone over $50.

check out voipbuster.com for instance

 

Specop 007

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2005
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Its quickly getting there. It was shaky at first but at this point I have complete confidence in it.
A VOIP phone is treated just like any other, if you have an outage the providers have a truckload of FCC paperwork to do.