Phone.com offers cutting-edge VoIP services for both residential and professional use. VoIP leverages the power of the Internet, providing advantages that aren't available with regular phone services.
The Top Five Reasons Phone.com is the Greatest VoIP
It is a number you can take with you
Free advanced features
Account information and management online
Easy and immediate online sign up
24 hr live customer service
Best Home VoIP Solution
Phone.com offers the best home VoIP solution. Our home VoIP services plans offer you a number you can take with you should yo decide to move. You can manage your account information online and you have access to 24-7 live customer support.
Phone.com's vision is to build upon the internet marketing and VoIP industry experience of our founders to deliver new technologies in a user-friendly way to homes and small businesses.
Voice-over-Internet protocol (VoIP, ) is a protocol optimized for the transmission of voice through the Internet or other packet-switched networks. VoIP is often used abstractly to refer to the actual transmission of voice (rather than the protocol implementing it). This latter concept is also referred to as IP telephony, Internet telephony, voice over broadband, broadband telephony, and broadband phone.
VoIP providers may be viewed as commercial realizations of the experimental Network Voice Protocol (1973) invented for the ARPANET providers. Some cost savings are due to utilizing a single network to carry voice and data, especially where users have underused network capacity that can carry VoIP at no additional cost. VoIP-to-VoIP phone calls are sometimes free, while VoIP calls connecting to public switched telephone networks (VoIP-to-PSTN) may have a cost that is borne by the VoIP user.
Voice-over-IP systems carry telephony signals as digital audio, typically reduced in data rate using speech data compression techniques, encapsulated in a data-packet stream over IP.
There are two types of PSTN-to-VoIP services: Direct inward dialing (DID) and access numbers. DID will connect a caller directly to the VoIP user, while access numbers require the caller to provide an extension number for the called VoIP user.