Magic Jack is like a CB radio.

watdahel

Golden Member
Jun 22, 2001
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I have Magic Jack and did some testing. I've got it connected to my 1.8 GHz desktop with 3 Mb/400 Kb cable internet. I did not connect a router so the desktop is wired directly to the modem. Using a cellphone I initiated a call. I figured people like to talk over each other so I simulated that scenario and I noticed that both parties on the line can't talk at the same time without the voice quality deteriorating on both ends or only one can hear the other. The voice becomes garbled. Each party have to talk in turns to get good voice quality so it's almost like using a CB radio.

Anyone else experienced this? I'm wondering if this is a characteristic of all VOIP? Would a faster upload connection improve it?
 

Binky

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
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Magicjack is $20/year. Most VOIP providers are $144-$240 per year ($12-$20 per month).

You get what you pay for.
 

corkyg

Elite Member | Peripherals
Super Moderator
Mar 4, 2000
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". . . I figured people like to talk over each other so I simulated that scenario and I noticed that both parties on the line can't talk at the same time without the voice quality deteriorating on both ends or only one can hear the other."

That should not be. Magic Jack is full duplex.
 

Pepsei

Lifer
Dec 14, 2001
12,895
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it's horribe at my parents house due to slowness of DSL and their chinese p2p tv software. i need to give it a test drive at my house with fios and see if there's a difference.
 

watdahel

Golden Member
Jun 22, 2001
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Try this: dial your magic jack voicemail and while the automated machine is talking slightly blow on your phone. You may notice the volume becomes lower if not completely mutes itself until you stop blowing and the volume goes back to normal. Blowing on the phone is a worst case scenario just to illustrate my point.