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“I can make calls out of my system, but the people I call can’t hear me.” Or vice versa. I wish I had a nickel for every message thread that has been written that goes something like this. The following is taken from Nerd Vittles: What settings have you changed on your firewall to accomodate SIP traffic ? Thus far I don’t have any buyers remorse, but I’ll keep you apprised of the situation if it should change.Hmm, if you could provide some more information, it’ll help us both.Īre these SIP extns on the same network ? Are you running this through FreePBX ? Are you calling from softphone to softphone, or to a SIP phone (Polycom, Linksys, etc). The Valley Shadow’s Rob Henshaw has some interesting commentary on his use of the Mifi with Verizon. Others have been making notes about their use of the Mifi device, both on the Sprint and Verizon networks.
Eyebeam 1.5 able to ansers calls trial#
They have a 30 day free trial download that’s definitely worth a look. While it’s primarily a desktop video conferencing client it happens to make a decent soft phone. It’d be nice to have a low-bitrate wideband option since we have the very capable Polycom VVX-1500 phones at the house for the moment.įWIW, LifeSize Desktop does support G.722, G.722.1 and even G.722.1 Annex C. Pity that Eyebeam doesn’t support G.722.1. But when it’s good it can be good enough for VoIP. The signal presence at your exact location matters a lot. Setting Eyebeam to allow G.729a made all the difference on one occasion. I was reminded that when you’re bandwidth constrained a low-bitrate codec can save the day. While in San Francisco I made some VoIP calls over the Mifi via OnSIP. In such a smallish place it’s easy to understand. I guess Sprint is not built out for 3G in that area. When we arrived in Sault Ste Marie MI I found that I could only get 1xRTT service.
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Service at DTW was great! In Alpina, as the little airplane sat on the ground for 30 minutes, I was able to sync Google Reader using EVDO Rev A service. On the way to Canada on vacation I made a point of trying the Mifi at DTW, then again in Alpina MI and Sault Ste Marie MI. What was even better, was that when I tweeted about it someone from Sprint responded via Twitter.
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The experience using the online chat was pretty good. That could quickly become a large sum so I just planned to not use the device while in Canada. It took them a little time but they got me an answer. Later, before going to Canada I tried using their online chat to ask about roaming fees in Canada. Luckily, they all had the same account number so I think that they simply suffered a printing error. The curious part is that I received four copies. Not long after the device arrived I got the first bill. That’s key to me one day being able to expense the monthly service charge. I also convinced two coworkers that it was much better than gambling on the hotel broadband offering. Not too bad.įWIW, I saved over $100 in hotel broadband fees. So in the first month I used around 2 GB. But then I had two trips to Canada where the roaming fees made using the Mifi impractical. Thus far I’m really enjoying the device and the service.ĭuring my first trip with the device I racked up 1.5 GB of data transfer and was starting to worry that 5GB a month was going to be too little. It’s just over a month since I took the decision to buy Sprint’s 3G mobile internet service using a Mifi device.