Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Digest for misc.consumers.frugal-living@googlegroups.com - 5 updates in 2 topics

Whoey Louie <trader4@optonline.net>: Nov 05 06:09AM -0800

On Monday, November 4, 2019 at 3:17:29 PM UTC-5, tb wrote:
 
> I don't want to get a telephone landline (copper wires)!
> I want to subscribe to Spectrum's Voice Plan. (I don't know if it is
> VOIP, or what).
 
It is VOIP.
 
 
 
> Is that the same with a VOIP (or whatever Spectrum offers!) phone plan?
 
> --
> tb
 
Already answered. You have two alternatives:
 
 
1 - Use a calling card for intnl
 
2 - Get Spectrum internet, but not phone service and use another VOIP
provider. I use Ooma, just $5 a month, plus whatever they charge for
intnl. You buy the Ooma VOIP box for about $50. You could check out
the various other VOIP providers and see what the rates are for the
countries of interest.
"tb" <nospam@example.invalid>: Nov 05 02:36PM

On 11/4/2019 at 5:06:25 PM catalpa wrote:
 
> > VOIP, or what).
 
> > Spectrum offers what they call Spectrum Voice International Calling
> > Plan
 
<https://www.spectrum.net/support/voice/countries-included-spectrum-voice-international-calling-plan/>
 
> You need to educate yourself about VOIP. Your choosen VOIP is your
> long-distance provider by default.
 
> If you don't like Spectrum Voice just use Google Voice.
 
Yes, but does VOIP preclude me from searching for another long distance
provider? That is what I do not understand. I readily admit that I am
old and not a techie so my question might not make much sense...
 
I could use a calling card as suggested by Whoey Louie or Google Voice
as you suggest. But I am just curious to know about long distance
providers and VOIP.
 
Another question: Using Google Voice does not imply that I need to get
a VOIP line from somebody else, like Spectrum?
 
--
tb
bje@ripco.com: Nov 05 06:35PM


> Yes, but does VOIP preclude me from searching for another long distance
> provider? That is what I do not understand. I readily admit that I am
> old and not a techie so my question might not make much sense...
 
 
THERE IS NO LONG DISTANT PROVIDER INVOLVED.
 
Understand that fact. It's all done over the internet.
 
You pay Spectrum $34.95 or whatever they want per month and it doesn't
matter if you call your next door neighbor 10 times a day or make a 10
hour call to your old high school buddy that moved to alaska, it is just
the $34.95 a month.
 
Long distance or local, it's all the same thing on those services.
 
-bruce
bje@ripco.com
"tb" <nospam@example.invalid>: Nov 05 09:11PM


> Long distance or local, it's all the same thing on those services.
 
> -bruce
> bje@ripco.com
 
Yes, I can see how there would be no long distance provider if the
calls are made between VoIP devices. But what about if a VoIP device
calls a landline in another county or state? There must be somebody (a
long distance provider, for instance) who provides public switched
telephone network translation. That must be incurring some charges
from a phone operator. Right?
 
--
tb
ggggg9271@gmail.com: Nov 04 08:30PM -0800

https://www.wsj.com/articles/follow-michael-crichtons-rule-11572814056
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