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How VoIP works Wireless VoIP VoIP FAQ's |
Mobile VoIP or 'mobile voice over Internet Protocol' is an extension of the voice over IP technology and service. It puts wings on the classic approach of VoIP.
Mobile VoIP is more than Voice over WiFi or VoWiFi. Using any broadband
IP-capable wireless network connection mobile VoIP will be an application over other networks such as EVDO rev A (which is synchronously high speed - both high speed up and down), HSDPA or potentially WiMax. Mobile
VoIP will enable further economic and mobility tradeoffs. For example, Voice over WiFi offers free service but is only available within the coverage area of the WiFi Access Point. High speed services from mobile operators using EVDO rev A or HSPDA with probably have better audio quality and capabilities for metropolitan-wide coverage including fast handoffs from mobile base station to another, yet it will cost more than the typical WiFi-based
VoIP service.
By mid-2006, there are an estimated 70 million users of Skype - a PC to PC service for voice communications over the Internet Protocol and some 20 million users of gateway-to-gateway
voice over IP services such as Vonage,
and there are a billion users of mobile phone users around the world.
Mobile VoIP took a significant step forward in the summer of 2006 when Nokia included not only a SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) stack but a VoIP client in their new E-series dual-mode WiFi handsets (E60, E61, E70). The E-series handsets are aimed at enterprise buyers, and significantly Nokia have announced their intention to do the same thing for consumer handsets by launching the N80 Internet edition in November 2006. In theory these handsets only require the settings to be populated into the user interface, however this process requires nearly 200 key clicks so very few unsupported users succeed in using the handsets for VoIP. The first mobile VoIP operator to launch on these handsets is the UK-based Truphone, using an OTA (Over The Air) provisioning method: users send a text to the relevant Truphone number in each country, which sends a text back containing a link which then downloads and runs a provisioning wizard.