Saturday 12 January 2013

Massive Scale Wi-Fi Networks Turn out to be a Big Plus to produce VoIP Services

Wi-Fi Proves to Be a Boon for VoIP Services historically there has been minimal doubt in anyone’s mind that the most challenging stumbling block for VoIP services over mobile phones has been the difficulties of Internet systems. Wireless data networking have so far been fairly prohibitive quality, even when being able to deliver healthy speeds at certain times.
For VoIP, the main factor is not the speed of the Internet connection literally, but the reliability and the ease of connectivity. If the network drops packets on a constant basis, is unreliable, or takes an inordinate amount of time to connect, it is more or less unusable as a VoIP service. VoIP doesn’t take up too much bandwidth as such, but it does place a premium on consistency.
Which is the reasons why it has always performed better on Wi-Fi networks rather than those provided by the telecom carriers.
Wi-Fi matches all the requirements for VoIP such as durability and speed.
It is in fact, only a notch beneath wired Internet connections. It is becoming more and more ubiquitous in hotels, bars, and especially in homes, one cannot rely on a Wi-Fi network always being available. If you are touring Whether one is driving, or is at the airport, the lack of reliable Wi-Fi connectivity makes users to fall back to either the wireless data networks, or the voice minutes provided by their telecom carrier.
What is needed therefore, is more ubiquitous Wi-Fi any place we are. Unfortunately Wi-Fi technology is such that it’s difficult to make a single carry far enough for it to be used by a bigger number of people. The only organization who has the power, money, infrastructure, and legal right to provide a huge network for public use is the state administration itself. Which is why the decision of the London government to provide free Wi-Fi for public use is so wonderful.
The Internet is a great asset. With openly available to you Wi-Fi, one can just imagine the benefits for services such as VoIP not to mention commercialism and companies.
Free market wireless Internet would probably act as the utmost nail in the coffin of the out-of-date model of the telecom providers.
There’s no getting away from the fact that VoIP is the future and that new technological developments will only serve to bind that fate. It’s only a matter of time before new and top-quality networks like 4G, or other dazzling new technologies rise up and carry the ship of VoIP to its place.

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