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                <td colspan="3"><b>Are You Still Using A Traditional Old Phone System in Your Business or Your Home?<br /></b><br />
Are you aware that you could save a SIGNIFICANT amount of money by switching to a VOIP phone service?<br /><br />
<b>Just What IS VOIP?</b><br />
- VOIP is a traditional phone (so you won't hear any difference) that uses you internet connection to place
phone calls without incurring any further surchages. This includes long distance!<br /><br />
<b>Just what does this mean to you?</b><br />
-This means that you are going to pay ZERO additional fees to place any phones calls being that you are already
using your existing internet setup. Think of this as if you were sending emails. You don't have to pay to send
any emails because you already use your exisiting interent connection to do so. With VOIP it follows the same
concept as email.<br /><br />
<b><a href="http://makephonecallsonline.net/phonesetup">Would you like to read more? Visit Here to Browse Ads for VOIP Phone Services</a></b></td>
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                A price of zero The ability to make free or almost-free calls over a fast internet connection fatally undermines the existing pricing model for telephony. ?We believe that you should not have to pay for making phone calls in future, just as you don't pay to send e-mail,? says Skype's co-founder, Niklas Zennstrom. That means not just the end of distance and time-based pricing?it also means the slow death of the trillion-dollar voice telephony market, as the marginal price of making phone calls heads inexorably downwards. VOIP makes possible more than just lower prices, however. It also means that, provided you have a broadband connection, you can choose from a number of providers of VOIP telephony and related add-on services, such as voicemail, conference calling or video. Many providers allow a VOIP account to be associated with a traditional telephone number?or with multiple numbers. So you can associate a San Francisco number, a New York number and a London number with your compu
ter or VOIP phone?and then be reached via a local call by anyone in any of those cities. Furthermore, your phone (or computer) will ring wherever you are in the world, as soon as it is plugged into the internet. So you can take your Madrid number with you to Mumbai, or your San Francisco number to Shanghai. Skype and other VOIP services, in other words, are leading to lower prices, more choice and greater flexibility. It is great news for consumers?but terrible for telecoms operators. What can they do? Watching the elephants dance As is always the case with a disruptive technology, the incumbents it threatens are dividing into those who are trying to block the new technology in the hope that it will simply go away, and those who are moving to embrace it even though it undermines their existing businesses. Since VOIP will cause revenue from voice calls to wither away, the most vulnerable operators are those that are most dependent on such revenue. In particular, that means mobile ope
rators, which have been struggling for years to get their subscribers to spend more on data services, but are still hugely dependent on voice. Worse, the very ?third generation? (3G) networks that are supposed to provide future growth for these firms could now undermine them, because such networks make mobile VOIP possible too. Least vulnerable, by contrast, are those fixed-line operators that are now building new networks based on internet technology, which will enable such firms to benefit from the greater efficiency and lower cost of VOIP compared with traditional telephony. These operators are taking an ?if you can't beat 'em, join 'em? approach and getting into the VOIP business. While their voice revenues will slowly evaporate, they will then be well placed to offer fee-based add-on services over their new networks. Again, this is a common pattern with disruptive technologies: forward-looking incumbents can end up giving upstart innovators a run for their money. It is now no l
onger a question of whether VOIP will wipe out traditional telephony, but a question of how quickly it will do so. People in the industry are already talking about the day, perhaps only five years away, when telephony will be a free service offered as part of a bundle of services as an incentive to buy other things such as broadband access or pay-TV services. VOIP, in short, is completely reshaping the telecoms landscape. And that is why so many people have been making such a fuss over Skype?a small company, yes, but one that symbolises a massive shift for a trillion-dollar industry. Don?t buy another phone ever again. That?s a weird thing for us to say
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<Br>You may haltany &all future admessages. <a href="http://makephonecallsonline.net/scug8">here</a> today. Addres:PO Box55071,Boston,MA,ZIP:O2205.- <br>
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