Industry


Ads by TechWords

See your link here


VoIP on Windows is like POTS on crack

Relying on a soft client running on Windows as my sole resource for making important calls has been a recipe for disaster. Plain old telephone service may be old fashioned, but you know what? With POTS, 99% of the time the phone just works. The same can't be said for my current voice over IP setup, which I am relying on in my new office.

I am in my third week of a pilot VoIP project. My setup now includes a Plantronics cordless headset in conjunction with Siemens "soft phone" client software on my laptop.

One issue is call quality. It's either great or it just plain sucks.

Just now as I hung up on a call, I asked the person: "Can you hear me ok?" "Yes, but you sound a bit clipped," came the reply. Often, my VoIP call quality is excellent. At other times it's an annoyance to me and the person on the other end of the line. What's dicey is that a call that sounds fine on my end may be terrible on the other.

I also have had problems with instabilty of the soft client as currently configured. My soft client just stops working or crashes entirely and won't close. So I end up killing it in Task Manager. Sometimes I can relaunch it. Usually I have to reboot.

That's not to say that you would have the same experience. While the system is not beta, my deployment is still part of a pilot, the purpose of which is to shake out such things. In my case the problem could be the soft client. Or something to do with Windows. Or a conflict with another application.

My favorite crash appears in the image below. This is my phone on crack. The outline of the soft client appears, but with a Microsoft Word document inside it. That happened while I was on a call. How do you hang up a call when you see can't see the controls? Fortunately, my head set has a button on it to hang up without relying on the soft client. But I had to reboot the machine to get the soft client - and my phone service - back runnning again. That's a pain in the neck.

With the telephone dependent on a general purpose computing device running Windows XP, it's not nearly as reliable as that big 'ol switch down the road. It handled call routing. It did the signaling. If I didn't have dial tone I called repair. Now when my phone doesn't work I trouble shoot my PC.

So here I am wishing I had POTS, which unlike my Windows laptop follows my golden rule for telecommunications and microwave ovens: Keep It Simple, Stupid.

Fortunately, it doesn't have to be this way. I was going over some of my issues last week with a technician from Siemens and he has suggested using a VoIP desk phone with a VPN router. My cordless headset can also be configured to work with it.

In this configuration I do nothing. The hardware authenticates, maintains the connection and reconnects if there is a problem. And it cuts the Windows laptop right out of the loop. Here's the funny thing: For years people talked about using VoIP to bypass the telcos and avoid line charges by running calls through the Internet. Now here I am opting to bypass another monopoly - Windows - to improve quality of service.

Will it work? Stay tuned.

Screenshot of my phone on crack.

Click for larger view.

What People Are Saying

Yeah, using Windows and a

Yeah, using Windows and a softphone is just asking for trouble. Get a Cisco phone on your desk and most of your problems will evaporate.

Remember, you get what you pay for. Use a cheap or free softphone and you will get cheap call quality. A softphone cannot equal the experience of a physical desk phone.

Try a www.zoiper.com or

Try a www.zoiper.com or xlitesoftphone, they have no issues with XP. Don't waste the money on new hardware it will not resolve the problems you are experiencing! Poor voice quality is almost always due to your internet connectivity, ensure you have a good line and a business grade provider. Your CPE equipment is unlikely to be the cause of poor quality calls. Make sure you have much more bandwidth than you theoretically need. The softphones have the same functionality as the siemens handset and should auto reconnect if the service is inetrupted. Your VoIP provider should be able to provide you with a softphone that auto configures, or is preconfigured, if they can't change provider.

If you can't get a high quality internet connection at you premises forget VoIP it will never work well over a poor quality connection.
This does not mean that your connection wont be fine for email and surfing, after all whether email takes a millisecond or 2 seconds for your to receive makes no difference, but it will kill call quality.

Your issue will be your internet connection, and or your VoIP provider.

If you want cheap calls with reliability, and good call quality use hybrid telephony, if your want functionality to improve business productivity use VoIP, but get the right connections and the right supplier.

Cheers

I hope you are not going to

I hope you are not going to try OCS 2007! If you do please let us know!
Ravenii