[Hidden-tech] best phone service?

Giannina Granata Silverman gsilverman at rocketranchdesign.com
Sun Jan 22 14:15:37 EST 2006


Thanks Jeanne...this is definitely something to check out. E911 is 
different from 911, which means that if you are unable to give the 
dispatcher your location (if you're having a stroke and can't speak, or 
other circumstances preventing you from speaking) you're pretty much in 
trouble.

Also, even though Vonage does ask you to sign your number up for E911 
and gives you ample warnings etc, it's not available in all areas. For 
instance, I was able to get it in Western MA but not Seattle, where I 
live now, which actually doesn't make sense. I am still trying to figure 
that one out.

I still keep a basic traditional line (AKA Verizon) at home for my home 
number and for outgoing faxes, and for emergencies.


Jeanne Yocum wrote:

>   ** Be a Good Dobee and help the group, you must be counted to post .
>   ** Fill out the survey/skills inventory in the member's area.
>
>
>  
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Hi, all,
>
> Wanted to make sure that anyone who is considering going to VOIP only 
> is aware of this potentially critical issue. This article is from Oct. 
> 2004; it may be possible that some of these issues have been fixed by 
> now but I do recall seeing a piece on TV about it in 2005 as well. So 
> best to check a company's 911 capabilities before signing up.
>
> Jeanne Yocum
>
>
>
>   911 calls made over Internet often get lower priority
>
> ST. PAUL (AP) ‹ Emergency calls made using new Internet telephone 
> services ring in through a nonemergency line and often aren't answered 
> immediately, according to an official who runs Ramsey County's largest 
> 911 emergency call center.
>
> Fred Fischer, a St. Paul police officer, added that the Internet 
> emergency calls usually are more difficult to handle because the 911 
> operator must ask the identity and location of the caller. In a normal 
> 911 call, that information automatically pops up when the operator 
> answers the call.
>
> "The benefit of the 911 system is that we know your location in the 
> event that you can't speak to us," Fischer said. "We don't get that 
> with the Internet calls."
>
> Conventional wired phones are being displaced by a new technology 
> called Voice Over Internet Protocol, or VOIP. VOIP uses a high-speed 
> Internet connection to provide phone service instead of a conventional 
> telephone line. But the technology is creating some problems for 911 
> operators.
>
> VOIP service, which provides extensive or unlimited local and 
> long-distance calling at discounted prices, converts the voice into 
> digital bits that are transmitted over the public Internet or a 
> private data network. The bits are converted back into a traditional 
> phone signal just before the call reaches its destination.
>
> Emergency officials say Vonage and AT&T's CallVantage service have the 
> difficulties Fischer describes, while Time Warner Cable's new Internet 
> phone service doesn't.
>
> Vonage didn't return a phone call to the Star Tribune of Minneapolis. 
> AT&T said it's working on the problem.
>
> "We recognize there are concerns out there, and we will resolve them," 
> said Kerry Hibbs, an AT&T spokesman in Dallas. "We make very clear to 
> our customers that our CallVantage Internet phone service does not 
> work the same as traditional landline 911."
>
> The Federal Communications Commission is expected to rule in the next 
> few months on whether Internet phone service should be regulated. If 
> the FCC decides VOIP should be regulated, it must set up requirements 
> for services such as 911, said Steve Seitz, spokesman for the National 
> Emergency Number Association, a Washington professional organization 
> for 911 operators.
>
> At the same time, the FCC is expected to tell regional Bell telephone 
> companies such as Qwest how much access to their 911 call-handling 
> networks they must provide to VOIP companies. Qwest has told the FCC 
> it would rather have the telephone and VOIP companies work out their 
> own 911 policy, said Mary LaFave, director of public policy for 
> advanced services, based in Denver.
>
> Technical improvements for VOIP companies are being developed by 
> Intrado Inc. of Longmont, Colo., which helps Vonage and AT&T connect 
> their VOIP 911 calls to emergency call centers in the nontraditional 
> way. Intrado, one of about a half-dozen such 911 intermediary firms 
> nationwide, said it hopes to introduce a new service next year that 
> will help VOIP providers connect to the traditional 911 calling network.
>
> Such changes can't come soon enough for Nancy Pollock, executive 
> director of the Metropolitan 911 Board, a St. Paul organization that 
> oversees 911 service for the seven-country metropolitan area.
>
> She's been upset by occasional 911 lapses, such as the routing of 911 
> Internet telephone calls to the wrong answering location.
>
> "It's fairly misleading, in our opinion, to say that all Internet 
> telephone service is 911 compatible," she said.
>
> But some Internet calling is 911-compatible. Time Warner Cable's new 
> Internet phone service, which is being tested and should be available 
> within 90 days, routes 911 calls via Qwest's conventional 911 network 
> to the nearest call center. As a result, the caller's name, address 
> and phone number automatically appear on the 911 operator's computer 
> screen.
>
> That's mostly because Time Warner has agreed, for now, to be regulated 
> by the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission and has been certified by 
> the commission as a company authorized to compete with Qwest for local 
> telephone customers. That designation gives Time Warner access to a 
> special Qwest call routing network for 911 calls.
>
> For now, emergency officials want consumers to understand that VOIP 
> 911 calls may not be as good as they think.
>
> "VOIP is a wonderful thing, and it allows you to make long-distance 
> calls dirt cheap," Fischer said. "But I don't think the sellers of 
> those services always make their customers aware that they are not 
> getting true 911 service."
>
> /Contributing: Information from the Star Tribune.
> /------------------------------------------------------------------------
> /Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This 
> material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
> /
> © Copyright 2006 USA TODAY, a division of _Gannett Co. Inc._
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>_______________________________________________
>Hidden-discuss mailing list - home page: http://www.hidden-tech.net
>Hidden-discuss at lists.hidden-tech.net
>
>You are receiving this because you are on the Hidden-Tech Discussion list.
>If you would like to change your list preferences, Go to the Members   
>page on the Hidden Tech Web site.
>http://www.hidden-tech.net/members
>

-- 
Giannina Granata Silverman
Rocket Ranch Design + Advertising
gsilverman at rocketranchdesign.com
413.303.9453
fax: 413.280.0038
www.rocketranchdesign.com





Google

More information about the Hidden-discuss mailing list