The VoIP Girl and others recently cancelled their Vonage account. VG is switching to something else. What VoIP service did she switch to? She hasn't decided yet, but it appears she has some choices, including using a virtual number call-forwarded to her softphone. She wants a local number (to her).
This approach could be interesting, but I'd want a single toll-free VoIP number. A few years back, just after I stopped working for a large telecom, I paid for a personal 800 toll-free number through their cellular division. It just happened that I did a lot of commuting: live in one city, work in two others, meetings for personal projects in others, hang out with friends in yet another, promote bands in still more. All in a single day or week. I didn't want people to have to spend a fortune trying to call me.
At first, I had a local cell phone number, but if I took that phone with me out of town and someone called me from my hometown, then it became a long distance charge for them. Then I got a second cell phone but with an area code in the city I spent most of my work day in. But that didn't quite work either. I then switched to a regional 800 toll-free number and my friends and business contacts were very happy. It only cost me about $35 per month, which beat the $200-300+ that I would have spent calling everyone myself. Except some weird politics developed between two big cellular providers and the 800 numbers on mobile phones option was cancelled in my area.
This was a whlie ago. Now I work almost completely from home, and don't travel much at present. Anyone I know that's geographically separated from me has a computer and I talk to them via IM (Instant Messaging), email, or a VoIP soft phone. Most of the time. But being the nomadic wanderer that I am, I'm planning to move yet again. Anyone I know locally right now would want to call me at my new town via a regular phone, not from a soft phone. (Don't ask. Maybe it's something in the water, but I can't convince anyone I know locally to get a soft phone. They don't mind IMs; soft phones they don't understand, or maybe don't like. Oh the shame.)
That means, to save everyone the long distance charges that would occur, I'd want a single call-in number linked to a softphone. Sure, I'll still have my Palm Treo 650, but it'll have a new local number after I move. I want something that isn't going to cost people money. Sure, Gizmo Project has a free 775 area code-based number, but that doesn't give you toll-free - as far as I can tell from the area 775 FAQ.
What I want is a single VoIP plan with a toll-free number attached to a quality soft-phone. Could be wrong, but I don't think anyone has that yet. This means that I'll probably have to get a landline (haven't had one in over 10 years) with an 800 number and forward it to a VoIP Call-In number. This isn't quite the same as VoIP Girl, since she wants a local number. I don't. I plan to be doing a lot of travelling before the end of this decade, for business and pleasure, and a single (toll-free) VoIP number would be best, for friends, family, and contacts. Of course, if I could get this number for fully-functioning mobile VoIP on my Palm Treo, I'd be even happier, and gladly pay for it. And before the end of the decade, please. Then I wouldn't have to worry about which VoIP soft client everyone was using.
Speaking of toll-free numbers, TipMonkies points to a site called Hardtofind800numbers.com. Speaks for itself, I think.
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