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| VoIP Phone Systems Discussion about Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) - technology that enables one to make and receive phone calls thru the Internet instead of using the traditional analog PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network) lines. |
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PMB, The OOMA looks pretty promising. A couple of questions:
I think MagicJack has to be connected to an operational computer on the internet. Does OOMA? I have Lingo, which is like Vonage. I have a Lingo Modem attached in sequence to my cable modem. Is OOMA like that? I have disconnected the AT&T wiring from my house. I connected the output from the Lingo modem back into a house jack, and it feeds phone service to four phone outlets for me that way. The wiring was already there, and why not just re-use it. Do you think this is possible with the OOMA?
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The OOMA is a standalone device, it requires nothing more than 110v power and the ethernet connection.
I know what you're talking about Majic Jack - and no this does not need any computer. The OOMA device can be hooked up in 2 ways. 1) it is a DHCP & NAT device. They actually suggest that you hook it up inbetween your cable modem, and your inside computer network. It has a WAN port and LAN port. It will issue IP addresses and do NAT for your internal computers. It issues IP address in 172.27.35.x range. This way it can ensure it gets the bandwidth it needs. 2) you can plug it into your network switch (like I have done). It will get an IP address 192.168.1.x just like any other computer in your network. It has a configuration page where you can set QOS that your router can use (if it's smart enough to handle QOS) to ensure OOMA gets the bandwith for good quality calls. The reason I did number 2 is I want to control how things are routed in my network at home. My router is higher performance than the OOMA device. Yes you can "back feed" your phone system wiring to all your phones. Works fine. You just want to make sure the phone line is disconnected at the port that goes outside - so you're not sending the dial tone back down the street. If you have it working currently, you probably disconnected your house wiring from the landline provider already. Theres a really good online forum that folks (sorta like here!) answer questions on the setup and use of this thing. ooma Forums • Index page
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