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  1. #1
    SMS
    Guest
    I know that this has been mentioned in the past, but with the new
    emphasis on "unlimited" plans, and the fact that Sprint SERO pricing is
    now essentially available to all, I think that it's worth mentioning again.

    $52/month Unlimited Wireless Service Using Sprint and Voicestick

    1. Get the $30 (plus taxes and fees) SERO plan on Sprint.

    2. Add "Sprint to Home" for $5/month extra.

    3. Sign up for an unlimited Voicestick Account at $200/year ($16.67 per
    month)*.

    4. Use your Voicestick number as your "home" number for "Sprint to Home."

    5. Give out your Voicestick number as your cellular number.

    6. Have Voicestick forward calls from your Voicestick number to your
    Sprint number. These calls will use no Sprint minutes because they're
    from your "home" phone number.

    7. For calling out, dial your Voicestick number from your Sprint phone,
    (it's a free call because it's to your "home" number). Voicestick
    recognizes this number (since you've programmed it into their system)
    and now you can call any number in the U.S. or Canada as part of your
    Voicestick unlimited plan. You can program your phone book in your cell
    phone to dial the access number, pause, and then dial the actual phone
    number, so you can easily automate the whole procedure.

    There are side benefits as well. When traveling outside the country with
    a prepaid phone on a local carrier you can program Voicestick to send
    your calls to that phone rather than your Sprint phone. You can also
    easily take advantage of Voicestick's low international rates without
    having to use a service such as One-Suite.

    While you're training your callers to call your Voicestick number
    instead of your cellular number you'll still be able to receive calls on
    your regular Sprint cell phone number (which you can port from another
    carrier). Unfortunately you can't port your cellular number to Voicestick.

    * Note that the $16.67/month Voicestick account isn't really required.
    You can use their "NextToNothing" account and pay 2¢/minute (minimum
    $1/month). The break-even point for the $16.67/month service is 833
    minutes per month ($16.67/$0.02).

    Reference Sites
    ---------------
    Voicestick: "http://www.voicestick.com/"
    Sprint Sero: "http://delivery.sprint.com/m/p/sprint/epc/epclanding.asp"
    SERO E-Mail Addresses (not all work): "http://tinyurl.com/2fkgul"



    See More: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick




  2. #2
    Joel Koltner
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    The main downside of this approach is that I wouldn't trust Voicestick -- or
    any of the other "consumer" grade VoIP providers -- to not occasionally garble
    and drop calls. Granted, the same thing can happen with regular cell calls,
    although there it's due to getting in a bad area that the cell tower can't
    hear well, whereas with VoIP you're at the mercy of what the Internet in
    general is up to and may lose calls with no warning whatsoever.

    So... fine for calling home or friends or whatever, not acceptable for
    business users, in my opinion.





  3. #3
    SMS
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    Joel Koltner wrote:
    > The main downside of this approach is that I wouldn't trust Voicestick -- or
    > any of the other "consumer" grade VoIP providers -- to not occasionally garble
    > and drop calls. Granted, the same thing can happen with regular cell calls,
    > although there it's due to getting in a bad area that the cell tower can't
    > hear well, whereas with VoIP you're at the mercy of what the Internet in
    > general is up to and may lose calls with no warning whatsoever.
    >
    > So... fine for calling home or friends or whatever, not acceptable for
    > business users, in my opinion.


    Actually there's a bigger issue with this for CDMA users, it's the loss
    of encryption security as the call passes through Voicestick.

    For GSM users, calls and texts are already insecure so sending the call
    through Voicestick isn't going to matter much. You never want to do any
    banking or credit card ordering on a GSM phone. See
    "http://www.darkreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=146616" for details.



  4. #4
    Larry
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    SMS <[email protected]> wrote in news:47be075a$0$36394
    [email protected]:

    > $52/month Unlimited Wireless Service Using Sprint and Voicestick
    >
    > 1. Get the $30 (plus taxes and fees) SERO plan on Sprint.
    >
    > 2. Add "Sprint to Home" for $5/month extra.
    >
    > 3. Sign up for an unlimited Voicestick Account at $200/year ($16.67 per
    > month)*.
    >
    >


    Hmm...I found this on Alltel's group so I think it's ok to respond....

    Alltel EVDO unlimited is $25/mo plus some taxes.

    http://tinyurl.com/34hyao
    "Wireless Internet Kits
    With a Wireless Internet Kit, simply use your wireless phone as your modem
    and surf the Internet at high speed. With Wireless Internet solutions from
    Alltel, you can stay in touch and get more done.

    Plans Device Price
    National Unlimited Data Smartphones $10.00/mo.
    National Unlimited Data All other handsets $25.00/mo."


    Skype Pro is $3/month no taxes or addons at all.
    http://skype.com/allfeatures/skypepro/
    * Nothing per minute nationwide calls
    For calls to any phone within the US and Canada* (with no connection
    fee).
    * Save up to 60% on a personal online number
    A SkypeIn number that lets people call you at local rates.
    * Call transfer
    Transfer calls to Skype contacts, phones or cell phones.
    * Save on the move with Skype To Go
    International calls from your cell phone at local rates.
    * Voicemail – never miss a call
    Pick up messages when you’re busy or offline.

    Just so you don't HAVE to carry some kind of computer around with your
    Sellphone, you can use Skype To Go for:
    http://www.skype.com/allfeatures/togo/
    3.9c connection fee plus 2.1c/min to most civilized countries, unless, of
    course, you're calling a "shared billing" scam like a Sellphone in Europe
    where you gotta pay HIS bill.

    To get a separate number so people "somewhere", anywhere you want to put
    the Skype In number they cover across the planet, you need Skype IN:
    http://www.skype.com/allfeatures/onlinenumber/
    You don't HAVE to have another number where you live! You can have up to 9
    different Skype In phone numbers in 20 countries for $60/each/YEAR, but you
    get a 60% discount on those if you are a Skype Pro subscriber, which would
    be crazy not to if you want Skype In so we'll price a US POTS number at
    $24/YEAR! I also have a number in London, UK, just for the hell of it.
    I'm one of the numbers off a busy pub, which makes for some really
    hilarious phone calls from England I wouldn't change for the world...(c;

    Of course, if you overseas friends are on Skype, too, the TOTAL cost of
    Skype is ZERO....pretty hard to beat. Now with Skype To Go, by the way,
    you can call them for free from your SELLphone, paying only airtime to your
    carrier to call Uncle Mahmood in Bahrain with full-motion color video if
    you plug in the webcam....for free.

    That should be cheaper. Let's see.....

    Alltel EVDO UNLIMITED $25/mo
    Skype Pro 3
    Skype In with pro discount 2
    Skype to the Sellphone 0 unless you use it...
    (Skype has no other recurring fees per month)

    Total cost is the Sellphone plan you like plus $30/month....plus addon
    taxes on the SELLphone ONLY. Skype has no tax loads or funny business
    charges.

    Alltel and Skype are MUCH cheaper than this Voicestick BS, hands down.

    If you're a REAL cheapskate....you can make it even cheaper!

    Get an Alltel Smartphone. Call 611 and buy UNLIMITED DATA for it for the
    princely sum of $10/month. Tether it to your laptop or tablet on USB or
    bluetooth DUN. UNLIMITED 1X is $10/mo more than your plan...and noone
    complains about USING it!....(c; The smartphone AND your tethered computer
    BOTH work just great for $10/month! Skype works great on Alltel 1X because
    it puts you on EVDO ANYWAYS!....(c;
    http://tinyurl.com/34hyao

    So, the CHEAPEST way to call Uncle Fritz in Basel, Switzerland or your
    girlfriend in Thailand is to GET THEM ON SKYPE! Your cost is ZERO from
    your home computer....or plan plus $10/mo through the smartphone on Alltel
    to the tablet or laptop....REALLY CHEAP!!

    NOONE beats Alltel.....NOONE.





  5. #5
    Larry
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    "Joel Koltner" <[email protected]> wrote in news:kWnvj.8499
    [email protected]:

    > So... fine for calling home or friends or whatever, not acceptable for
    > business users, in my opinion.
    >
    >


    No so, Skype.
    http://skype.com/security/security/
    http://www.skype.com/security/files/...evaluation.pdf

    "2.3 Session Cryptography
    All traffic in a session is encrypted by XORing the plaintext with key
    stream generated by 256-bit AES (also known as Rijndael) running in integer
    counter mode (ICM). The key used is SKAB. Skype sessions contain multiple
    streams. The ICM counter depends on the stream, on salt, and the sequency
    within the stream."

    http://skype.com/security/
    http://skype.com/security/business/
    http://skype.com/download/skype/windows/business/

    Add to this your computer being used as a supernode on Skype and even more
    confusing data occasionally runs through your IP.

    With 256-bit encryption and multiple streams, Skype is MORE secure than any
    Sellphone or POTS, even if the Skype connection is over the Sellphone data.

    Skype audio, even on EVDO, sounds just like you're on a landline, but
    without the analog hissing and sputtering noises....to any place that has
    broadband.






  6. #6
    Steve Sobol
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    ["Followup-To:" header set to alt.cellular.verizon.]
    On 2008-02-22, Larry <[email protected]> wrote:

    > Hmm...I found this on Alltel's group so I think it's ok to respond....
    >
    > Alltel EVDO unlimited is $25/mo plus some taxes.


    But Larry, you're comparing apples to oranges. Voice+data is what we're
    talking about here. I want to see voice+data plans. I'm not saying that
    what you're talking about is a bad idea... I am curious if Alltel is going to
    do an unlimited nationwide plan too.

    In Cleveland, Alltel, and GTE Wireless before them, had unlimited
    $59.99 local plans for a few years. The one problem with NATIONWIDE
    unlimited on Alltel is that they could end up eating a ton of roaming
    charges, or have to charge customers for roaming.

    Why is this a problem?

    Alltel has no footprint in California. There are three HUGE population
    centers here: Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco. That's why.

    > NOONE beats Alltel.....NOONE.


    It would be great if they were nationwide. Personally, I would consider
    using them (I used Alltel in Cleveland for a while after GTE divested their
    Cleveland network to Alltel). And they got a fair amount of coverage by
    purchasing Western Wireless CellularONE. But...


    --
    Steve Sobol, Victorville, CA PGP:0xE3AE35ED www.SteveSobol.com
    Geek-for-hire. Details: http://www.linkedin.com/in/stevesobol




  7. #7
    Todd Allcock
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    At 21 Feb 2008 15:36:46 -0800 Joel Koltner wrote:
    > The main downside of this approach is that I wouldn't trust Voicestick --

    or
    > any of the other "consumer" grade VoIP providers -- to not occasionally

    garble
    > and drop calls. Granted, the same thing can happen with regular cell

    calls,
    > although there it's due to getting in a bad area that the cell tower

    can't
    > hear well, whereas with VoIP you're at the mercy of what the Internet in
    > general is up to and may lose calls with no warning whatsoever.
    >
    > So... fine for calling home or friends or whatever, not acceptable for
    > business users, in my opinion.


    Perhaps, but many businesses use VoIP themselves these days (but under
    ideal balanced network conditions vs. those at home) and, using the
    Voicestick "bridge" as Steven described is only "semi-VoIP," like using a
    cheap calling card these days. It's a cell call from you to their system,
    VoIP from their system to the terminating phone company (hopefully, again,
    under better conditions than a home broadband connection!)

    It's worked well for me when I've used it for international calls.





  8. #8
    Joel Koltner
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    "Larry" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > Skype audio, even on EVDO, sounds just like you're on a landline, but
    > without the analog hissing and sputtering noises....to any place that has
    > broadband.


    That hasn't been my experience with VoIP. On international calls, VoIP is
    fine oh, say... 90% of the time. But the other 10% of the time I get random
    disconnects, horribly distorted speech, and other artifiacts. It may be the
    Internet in general, it may be my particular provider, who knows? But the
    point is that -- for the average user -- there IS no way of knowing, so it's a
    bit of a crapshoot. On the other hand, with *just* a cell phone, barring
    known areas where simply lack coverage, the call quality is more like 99.9%.

    So, again... fine for calling friends and family, not something I'd want to
    run a business over.





  9. #9
    Joel Koltner
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    Hi Todd,

    "Todd Allcock" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > Perhaps, but many businesses use VoIP themselves these days (but under
    > ideal balanced network conditions vs. those at home)


    That's a big difference in my mind. :-)

    I probably am too pessimistic about this based on personal mediocre
    experiences with VoIP for international calls.

    ---Joel





  10. #10
    Todd Allcock
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    At 22 Feb 2008 12:55:35 -0800 Joel Koltner wrote:

    > "Todd Allcock" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    > news:[email protected]...
    > > Perhaps, but many businesses use VoIP themselves these days (but under
    > > ideal balanced network conditions vs. those at home)

    >
    > That's a big difference in my mind. :-)



    I agree. I guess the point I was trying to make, was I'm less leery of
    using VoIP if it's being used commercially as a "backhaul" by a provider
    (like an LD/calling card company) than if I'm using it at home on a flakey
    consumer broadband connection.


    > I probably am too pessimistic about this based on personal mediocre
    > experiences with VoIP for international calls.


    My experience is similar- I've made a lot of lousy quality LD calls from
    home via VoIP on my own equipment, but have received decent service using
    low-cost LD providers like OneSuite who I assume uses VoIP themselves as a
    method of connection, and through Voicestick's "cellular bridge" service.

    The weak link in the VoIP chain, IMO, is on the consumer's end. Eliminate
    that (by using POTS or cellular) and VoIP seems to work a lot more
    consistently, at least for me!






  11. #11
    Larry
    Guest

    Re: $52 per Month Unlimited on Sprint, using Voicestick

    "Joel Koltner" <[email protected]> wrote in
    news[email protected]:

    > "Larry" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    > news:[email protected]...
    >> Skype audio, even on EVDO, sounds just like you're on a landline, but
    >> without the analog hissing and sputtering noises....to any place that
    >> has broadband.

    >
    > That hasn't been my experience with VoIP. On international calls,
    > VoIP is fine oh, say... 90% of the time. But the other 10% of the
    > time I get random disconnects, horribly distorted speech, and other
    > artifiacts. It may be the Internet in general, it may be my
    > particular provider, who knows? But the point is that -- for the
    > average user -- there IS no way of knowing, so it's a bit of a
    > crapshoot. On the other hand, with *just* a cell phone, barring known
    > areas where simply lack coverage, the call quality is more like 99.9%.
    >
    > So, again... fine for calling friends and family, not something I'd
    > want to run a business over.
    >
    >
    >


    I wonder if Skype works better because of its careful 256-bit
    encryption, which must also be transmitted in perfect code or it isn't
    going to be accepted. I've never heard any distortion, etc., on Skype
    because Skype's software has automatic gain control. Skype sets the
    audio level, itself, instead of depending on the user. Even the
    cheapest 99c microphone from the thrift shop, what I use at home, sounds
    great.

    Skype over wifi or sellphone data is, of course, subject to being
    intermittent if, for instance, some idiot you're trying to talk to
    doesn't have BROADBAND and is trying to use Skype on a dialup or low
    bandwidth sellphone circuit that's fading in and out. That has nothing
    to do with Skype, though. It DOES have to have its data in a timely
    manner like any streaming audio. However, the 500ms awful latency of a
    sellphone data circuit over bluetooth DUN doesn't seem to bother it at
    all.

    Running a business on Skype wouldn't be any worse, but possibly better,
    than making business calls on your sellphone with it cutting in and out
    from the crappy coverage of the average sellphone carrier's poorly laid
    out system. Skype on your desktop or over your wifi doesn't have
    sellphone dead zones or dropped calls. Skype at the office over
    Ethernet to broadband sounds much better than the deskphone next to the
    computer if you're calling Timbuctoo on POTS.









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