Call landlines and mobiles from outside US/Canada, with Google Voice
You can currently call landlines and cell phones (mobiles) using Google Voice, from within your GMail account. As long as you reside in the US or in Canada.
It appears that Google is about to extend this feature to the rest of the world. The following are screenshots taking this morning which show that the functionality is gradually being extended to the rest of the world.
First of all, log in to your GMail account.
If it works for you, you are greeted with the above hint about making calls. By clicking on Try it now, you activate the new feature.
You need to accept the above. The rates are quite competitive, and there is comparison with some other VOIP provider, most probably Skype. Google Voice does not have a connection fee for the calls (unlike Skype, which does have a connection fee).
Then, you install an addon so that you can make phone calls. See http://www.google.com/intl/en/chat/voice/ I have been testing this on Ubuntu 11.04 (64-bit) and I installed the appropriate package.
Once you activate the service, you now have the option to Call phone from the Instant Messenger (IM) app of your GMail.
At the moment I get the message that I cannot add credit to my account, so I am lucky enough to have some left-over credit from I-do-not-remember-from-where.
Now we are making a phone call to a landline in Greece. It shows the cost, $0.2/min.
My credit in this account is in US Dollars, and somehow I cannot top up using Google Checkout because “Google Voice is not available in your country”. However, in an other account, with no existing credit, I get the option to top up with Google Checkout, in British pounds.
There are reports that users can get a +phonenumber@sip.voice.google.com SIP address. I believe that eventually users will be able to access their Google Voice accounts using SIP, so that they can use their preferred VOIP client software. At the moment it may or may not work for you. My attempts to call using Empathy, Jitsi, SFLPhone were currently unsuccessful.
Having the ability to call landlines and mobiles from Google Voice (within GMail) is big. Google did not market yet well enough the Google Voice PC to PC features in GMail. Now, with Google Voice to landlines and mobiles, Google has a complete offering for VOIP that can attack Skype at their core business. The VOIP business is changing rapidly.
Update
Here is the Google announcement for Google Voice all over the world, http://googlevoiceblog.blogspot.com/2011/08/calling-from-gmail-now-in-38-languages.html
Features for the killer VoIP app
I see two issues that plague FLOSS VoIP apps and do not allow their widest adoption. The first VoIP app that gets these, should get fame and glory.
First, the majority of users are broadband users, with a router that protects the inside systems. It is not possible for an outsider to initiate a network connection to a system inside the LAN. If both users that try to communicate have this typical network configuration, then the current tools say something like «You have a symmetric NAT, and at the moment the way to fix this is to either put your computer in the DMZ or enable manually port-forwarding for specific ports.» Ekiga discusses this issue at Ekiga behind a NAT router and directs the affected users (when using the program) to that page. Twinkle (QT-based SIP-phone) shows you a dialog box with the exact ports to enable for port-forwarding on your router.
The issue of a symmetric NAT can be solved in most of the cases by using the UPnP protocol. If the router supports UPnP (most do by default), then the VoIP app can enable the port-forwarding by itself, transparently from the user, and it will just work.
Until recently there was no good UPnP library, which was probably the reason for the lack of support. However, this changed with GUPnP.
The bug report to add (G)UPnP support to Ekiga is Bug 337166 – UPnP for firewall/NAT penetration.
Ekiga already supports STUN and Zeroconf. With UPnP, the vast majority of users would be covered.
The other issue is the difficulty in configuring your third-party VoIP SIP account, that allows you to make inexpensive voice conversations to telephones and mobiles. The reason why it is difficult is because the user has to figure out the SIP server and other configuration details. The terminology is confusing, registrar, domain, etc.
Ekiga has good support in configuring Diamondcard. The user is presented with a Wizard when configuring for the first time Ekiga.

What needs to be done is to put together the details for each provider and maintain a list at ekiga.com. The client would have a copy of the list, and allow on-demand updates. The bug report, Bug 547215 – Ekiga should know all SIP/VoIP providers, allow easy account addition.
Update 11Aug08: Wiki page with PC-to-phone providers and their details.
Ρύθμιση SIP router για VoipBuster, VoipStunt, κτλ
Πριν λίγο ολοκλήρωσα τη ρύθμιση ενός SIP router, του Linksys PAP2, για τις υπηρεσίες VoipBuster και VoipStunt. Η συσκευή έχει δύο θύρες για τηλέφωνα, με αποτέλεσμα να μπορείς να βάλεις δύο διαφορετικούς λογαριασμούς από τις πολλές εταιρίες που έχουν ανταγωνιστικές τιμές τηλεφωνικών συνδιαλέξεων.
Οι ρυθμίσεις δεν είναι τόσο εύκολες, βοηθάει όμως αρκετά αυτή η σελίδα με παραδείγματα για το LinkSys PAP2. Όχι, δεν είναι η ίδια η συσκευή στην οποία συνδέεστε. Ο διαχειριστής αποθήκευσε τις σελίδες από τη δική του συσκευή και τις διαθέτει στο δικό του εξυπηρετητή ιστοσελίδων.
Αν είστε πελάτης με τη Vonage, σάς δίνουν την ίδια ακριβώς συσκευή η οποία είναι κλειδωμένη στο δίκτυο της εταιρίας. Ωστόσο, φαίνεται να είναι αρκετά πιο φτηνό να μπει κάποιος στο κόπο να ρυθμίσει τρίτες εταιρίες που είναι πιο προσιτές.
Η εγκατάσταση δούλεψε με την πρώτη. Τηλεφώνημα από VoipBuster σε κινητό (έχει ενεργοποιηθεί ο δωρεάν αριθμός σταθερού τηλεφώνου που προσφέρει η εταιρία) και το αντίθετο. Δίχως καθυστερήσεις ή προβλήματα.




