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Showing posts with label Voip Solutions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Voip Solutions. Show all posts

Monday, October 12, 2009

Nimbuzz: Instant messaging & VoIP for your mobile


Mobile Messaging
Nimbuzz, the new mobile application funded by Mangrove Capital Partners (the same smart guys that provided the initial funding for Skype) has just launched their new “talk” application for mobile all over the world.
Numbuzz is a total fredome to voice and instant messaging for your mobile phone in Pakistan. If you have an internet enabled phone, you can use nimbuzz to stay online and get connected to your friends and family members 24 hours a day. You can also make international calls at a local call charges.
The new Nimbuzz beta also supports PC-to-mobile and mobile-to-PC calls. This works with Nimbuzz as well as Gtalk and again your calls are either completely free or billed at your prevailing rate for a local call. Lastly, PC-to-PC calls are supported using either Gtalk or Nimbuzz and of course these calls are also completely free.

Making Voice Call
The experience in placing and receiving calls is quite good. From a mobile handset you simply open the Nimbuzz application, select the contact you wish to call and select call. The application then asks if you wish to dial a toll free 800 (you should say yes). It then tells you that it is setting up the call. Simultaneously, the person you are calling will receive a message that you are trying to call him. If they accept they too will get a dialog requesting permission for the phone to dial an 800#. (they should also say yes). Provided both parties say yes the call will be connected and you should be able to converse with your friend anywhere they happen to be (well, at least in thirty countries currently) for free.
Text Messaging:
You can send and receive instant messages to gTalk, yahoo, AIM, ICQ and hotmail messenger contacts

These things make this an application with a tough to beat set of highly useful and valuable features.
In any case Nimbuzz is free, the calls are free, and the text messaging is free too.
All of my friends and family members are using and enjoying its cool features. So what are you waiting for? Give it a try and let me know what you think of it.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

How Consultants Help SMBs Choose VoIP Systems

Buying phone systems is getting more complicated for SMBs (small- to medium-sized businesses). Partly that's because the systems are becoming more complex, and partly it's due to the fact that smaller companies have started expecting more from the systems they choose. For these reasons, such companies are depending more on consultants to help them make the right choices. Consultants are likewise depending on SMBs for a greater percentage of their income.

Hard Evidence

A recent study by The Brookside Group LLC of Mendham, N.J. tells the story. The firm's "2008 State of the Market Study" surveyed the activities of independent telecom consultants not affiliated with vendors. It analyzed the responses of 342 consultants and the updated professional profiles of 1,750.

The resulting data indicated that 54 percent of the consultants' clients are now SMBs, defined as between six and 999 employees. Enterprises of 1,000 employees and above account for 46 percent. That's up from 45 percent SMB, 55 percent enterprise in 2001, and a 49/51 split in 2005. The growth in SMB clients has particularly accelerated over the past three years, the report found. The majority of those clients fall in the medium-sized category, which the report defines as between 100 and 999 employees.

Driving Causes

The main impetus behind the trend has been smaller companies' growing interest in IP PBXes and hosted-IP telephony, according to Brookside founding partner Michael Sawka. Other key drivers are interest in unified communications and the growth of broadband networks that can support such technologies.

But making wise choices about complex new IP-based communication systems requires considerable expertise, which boosts demand for consultants. Their know-how is considerable, with 72 percent of those surveyed having been in business for more than 10 years. The consultants themselves are doing what they can to boost demand even further by broadening the range of services they offer.

Turning to Consultants

Clients have a number of reasons for using consultants to help them with their telephony needs, according to the report. The first is that consultants will help themsave money on phone systems and services, a motive of 69 percent. Second, at 52 percent, is a specific interest in a new technology, product or service. Others include the desires to do more with existing phone systems and networks, to increase network efficiency and to improve business processes. Improving business communication and collaboration is a motive of 33 percent, while improving competitive advantage is important for 29 percent.

According to Sawka, the most fundamental service consultants offer is needs assessment, or helping companies determine which equipment or services will work best for them. Beyond that, consultants make themselves useful in a variety of ways, depending on a client's needs and resources. They can help evaluate and choose vendors, for example, even going so far as to write RFPs (request for proposals) and assist in contract negotiations.

And in the last 12 to 18 months, Sawka added, consultants have become involved in network design and configuration because of IP telephony's dependence on complex data networks as opposed to simpler traditional telephone wiring. Consultants are even increasingly moving into deploying and managing phone systems and networks on an outsourced basis, according to Sawka. "There's a growing gray area between consultants and integrators," he explained. "The big difference is that consultants aren't financially compensated by the vendor."

The report noted that a number of vertical industry segments find consultants particularly useful. The top source of clients is health care, followed by banking and finance, local and state government and education (both K-12 and higher). Professionals such as lawyers and accountants also rely significantly on consultants

VoIP Featured News

Quality of Service, Customer Support, Are Key Factors When Choosing a Hosted Business VoIP Provider
While most companies base the decision to switch from traditional phone service to VoIP mainly on cost savings (after all, you can save anywhere from 50 to 80 percent on your phone bill by switching to a hosted VoIP service) there are two other major factors that should be considered when choosing a hosted VoIP provider: Quality of service and customer support.

AMI-Partners: VoIP, IP Telephony to Fuel SMB Networking Market
A new report from market research firm AMI-Partners predicted that the desire of small- and medium-size businesses looking to cut employees' travel costs will contribute to sizeable growth in the networking market to the tune of $1.6 billion this year. According to AMI-Partners, more companies are taking advantage of software-based Voice over Internet Protocol, or "VoIP" service, such as Skype, and video conferencing solutions as an alternative to traveling to cut costs, fueling the success of the APAC SMB networking market.

Hosted Business VoIP: What Are You Waiting For?
If you're still using traditional phone service, you can probably shave anywhere from 50 to 80 percent off your monthly phone bill by switching to a hosted VoIP, (voice over Internet protocol) service.

WhichVoIP.com Names Business VoIP Provider Nextiva as its 'Provider of the Month'
WhichVoIP.com, a Website that ranks hosted VoIP services in order to help business owners make an informed decision, has awarded business VoIP provider Nextiva as its "Provider of the Month" for July 2009

Infonetics: VoIP Service Provider Equipment Market Saw Revenues Decline 29 Percent in 1Q 2009
Due to the rough economy, revenues for the global VoIP service provider equipment market declined about 29 percent in the first quarter of this year – the sharpest quarterly decline ever – according to a new report from Infonetics Research.