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A broadband phone
is a phone that uses the Internet to make calls over Internet Protocol
(IP). You can use your old telephone for calling, but your calls are
routed through IP using broadband Internet access. This is done by using
a device called a digital adapter, which connects the broadband modem
with your telephone. This connection gives access to the broadband phone
line. The primary function of the digital adapter is to unravel and
rearrange the digital voice data that it obtains through the Internet
and convert it into intelligible messages like the ones you receive
through your ordinary non-digital telephone. The international call
costs are much cheaper than those made over the conventional telephones
or cell phones. The process of transmission of messages is quite
efficient.
The transmission of voice over IP, or "VoIP" for short, has a
bright future in making long distance calls. The main plus point is that
the transmission of voice messages does not require any new platform or
infrastructure. It uses the already existing Internet communication
system, which is being used with great success. Great advances are being
made in the improvement of the Internet communication systems as new
technologies are being introduced. In view of this it can be safely
assumed that the new broadband telephone technology, which rides
piggyback on the Internet, will advance accordingly and provide improved
and cheaper services to individual and corporate business users. Quite
possibly the interconnecting digital adapter would altogether be
eliminated. You may get digital telephones that can be plugged directly
into the USB ports on PCs and can send and receive calls digitally.
It appears that as broadband grows in popularity, VoIP will
revolutionize the telecommunication system as never before, even more
than cell phones have done. As a result, most call charges should
eventually become dirt-cheap.
Article Information
by Peter Emerson,
www.z-broadband.com
source: goarticles.com
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