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Web Phone Does the Job
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Callserve's Internet Telephone provides a workable
long-distance option
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Like any telephone lover, I
want crystal-clear reception and complete conversations -- without the annoying
echoes, dropped sentences, or abrupt terminations that have plagued Web-based
phones in the past. Internet Telephone from Callserve Communications seems to
have circumvented such snags -- and it delivers pretty impressive call quality
over a broadband connection.
You prepay for talk time by purchasing units from the U.K.-based service. I
started with 2000 units (which cost roughly $31 -- the price fluctuates based on
exchange rates). Those 2000 units can get you more than 600 minutes of talk time
using your PC, depending on how and where you call. If you call outside the
United States, connections to cell phones cost more than those to landlines. For
example, you pay 3 units (about 5 cents) per minute to Italy or the United
Kingdom, but calls to cell phones in the two countries cost 33 cents and 36
cents per minute, respectively.
After downloading the service's free software, you plug a microphone into your
PC, type your number into the Internet Phone app, click the "place call" icon,
and start yakking. The software also keeps track of how and where you're
calling.
I tested the service nationally and overseas by using standard PC headset
microphones as well as Callserve's $50 USB Internet Handset and its $13 Analog
Internet Handset. The quality wasn't as good when I used a USB port.
Unfortunately, getting the sound fine-tuned was time-consuming. Initially, I had
no problem hearing people, but to at least one listener, I sounded like a
distressed fax machine. To change that, I had to futz a bit with volume control
and microphone settings. You may use the software to adjust the sound settings,
to redial, and to access your call log by clicking the virtual phone's buttons
(by the time you read this, the software should also offer a phone book
feature).
Anyone who calls landlines abroad regularly can save on long-distance charges by
using Callserve's Internet Telephone. But you have to enjoy being online and
perched near your PC to use it.
By Aoife McEvoy
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©2001 Neilrideout.com
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