BroadVoice$39.95 activation fee and $24.95 per month for unlimited calling in the
U.S. and 34 countries.
I tested BroadVoice as the geek option. It advertises the ability to BYOD (i.e., “bring your own device”), meaning you’re in luck if you’re one of the few who has something like the ZyXEL P-2000W v.2 Wi-Fi phone. For the rest of us, the most appealing thing about BroadVoice is the promise of unlimited calling to 35 countries. If only it worked consistently. During the reliability test, the phone got stuck on a fast busy signal for more than two hours when making outgoing calls. It didn’t fare so well in voice quality, either. When I uploaded a few big files to test the response to limited bandwidth, my dad grew frustrated with the garbled sound. “This one is the pits,” he said.
Sound quality: 9.5Reliability: -2International: 5Portability: 4Bells and whistles: 4 (sleek Web interface, but awesome-sounding new features like e-mail notifications for calls from specific phone numbers have been listed as “coming soon” for months) Number selection: 2 (no 212; international numbers are available)
Total: 22.5
Skype0.017 euros per minute (approximately 2 cents per minute) to the
U.S. and many countries (10 euro minimum purchase, plus 30 euros for 12 months of incoming calls and voice mail).The free computer-to-computer phone service has recently made a play to be your everyday phone. Skype now offers the bare minimum that you need to replace a land line: outgoing and incoming calls to and from regular telephones, plus voice mail service. You’ll have fun choosing your phone number through a snazzy interface that searches for specific sequences of digits or letters, but the selection isn’t very big. (Also, for some reason your number shows up on other peoples’ caller ID as a weirdo foreign number.) In the automated test, all but one incoming call came through. But several times when I called on my own, calls wouldn’t connect and I’d have to try again. The hollow voice quality wasn’t nearly up to land-line snuff on my older PC laptop, either.Sound quality: 6Reliability: 14*International: 3Portability: 5 (no adapter required)Bells and whistles: 1Number selection: 2 (no 212; international numbers are available)Total: 31*Only tested incoming, as I couldn’t figure out how to automate a batch of outgoing Skype calls.
Verizon VoiceWingFree activation and $34.95 per month for unlimited calling in the
U.S.
Verizon’s “VoiceWing” service raises a key question: Why dilute a recognizable brand by inventing a stupid name for your VoIP service? (Also see: AT&T CallVantage.) In any case, VoiceWing’s top-notch Web site features integration with its online yellow pages and lets you coordinate simultaneous ringing of your VoIP line, cell phone, and work number. But even in the normal conversation test, my dad thought VoiceWing sounded a little too tinny. When I made business calls, one source told me I sounded “fuzzy” and told me to call back. Can you hear me now? Not so well.
Sound quality: 8Reliability: 10International: 1 (even
Canada isn’t free)Portability: 4Bells and whistles: 5Number selection: 4 (no 212; nice selection otherwise)
Total: 32
GalaxyVoice$24.95 activation fee and $19.95 per month for unlimited calling in the
U.S. and to 20 other countries.The cheapest option turns out to be a very good value if you’re willing to sacrifice some voice quality. GalaxyVoice offers 212 numbers, the smallest adapter I tested, and a perfect score in the reliability test. But the real claim to fame here is the “free” plan: Pay $60 for an adapter and activation fee and you get 60 minutes of outgoing calls and unlimited incoming calls for free, so long as you accept a Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, or New York area code—including 212! The catch: Even under optimal conditions, the quality wasn’t so great, and it was completely impossible to have a conversation during the BitTorrent/Xbox test.
Sound quality: 8Reliability: 15International: 5Portability: 5Bells and whistles: 3Number selection: 4 (has 212!)
Total: 40
AT&T CallVantage$29.99 activation fee and $29.99 per month for unlimited calling in the U.S. and
Canada (first month free, through Dec. 31, 2005).Along with GalaxyVoice, CallVantage is the only service that didn’t miss a single incoming or outgoing call. Most important, this was the only provider to sound as good as or better than a land line during both normal and Xbox/BitTorrent conversations. The reason, an AT&T flack tells me, is that their adapter replaces your router and throttles back bandwidth-hogging devices (like your computer or Xbox) while you’re on a call. Unfortunately, that means it’s bigger than any other adapter—about the size of a small George Foreman grill. And it also needs to be wired between your cable or DSL modem and anything else that’s connected to the Internet, making it more cumbersome to unplug and take with you. Not that my dad cares. “This is the one I want,” he says.
Sound quality: 14Reliability: 15International: 1Portability: 1Bells and whistles: 5Number selection: 5 (has 212!)
Total: 41