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Comments in response to »Review of T-Mobile VoIP by rcbrcb by rcbrcb See Profile
iansltx

join:2007-02-19
Golden, CO
·Comcast
·Qwest.net
·magicjack.com
·BeeCreek Communica..
·Sprint Mobile Broa..

2.4 GHz

THe reason the router said you couldn't use 2.4 GHz phones is 802.11g WiFi (which the router uses) is also on 2.4 GHz spectrum, creating interference issues, especially if you wanted to use your cell phones with Hotspot@Home. Hence the preference for DECT 6 phones with the T-Mobile VoIP service, or any place that has a WiFi router in the house. My house uses old 900 MHz phones and they work great

rcbrcb
Premium
join:2007-02-21
Chicago, IL

Re: 2.4 GHz

Good to know, thanks for the info. I will keep an eye out for interference as I am using my BB Curve on the wireless as well.

supergirl

join:2007-03-20
Pensacola, FL
·Cox VOIP
·Skype
·Cox HSI
·AT&T Southeast
·magicjack.com

I wish T-Mobile Cell Service Worked Here...

...Nothing but good reports from friends who have T@Home. I do think this is the Vonage and other Indie VOIPs's killer. With taxes, my friend says it is about $17-18 a month. That's how much their total bill went up. Is that right?
--
Saving the world keeps me busy. However, I find Earth very primitive from my home planet of Krypton.
-Supergirl

keysgate

join:2003-03-15
Trenton, MI
·T-Mobile VoIP
·T-Mobile US

message waiting light

Please let me know if your message waiting light works on your phone. I have new Phillips 6.0 phones that worked great with ATT CallVantage. But do not work with T-Mobile? I have seen others with problem in the forums.
--
"Oh my antenna gone...oh no its right down here, maybe if i wiggle it around i'll get more service"

rcbrcb
Premium
join:2007-02-21
Chicago, IL

Re: message waiting light

Yes, my message waiting lights do work on my phones.....

Using Hotspot

@comcast.net

Pros and Cons, and Answering Machines

We switched over to Hot Spot from Qwest a few weeks ago. Overall I give it a thumbs up.

Pros:
Price: If you already have TM cell service the price can't be beat. $50 for the router, $36 for line activation, and $10/mo for service.

Indoor wiring: After the phone company goes "dead" (usually 2-3 days after the number ports) AND after you disconnect telco at your phone box outside the house, connect the router phone jack to any jack in the house with any phone line. It works. If you don't disconnect the phone co line, you'll get a warble when you answer the phone.

Cons:
Uptime: It's hard to beat tel co on 99.999%. We've had one brief downtime in 1 month. It will go down if there is a power failure OR a cable outage (we use Comcast internet), but even during a 1 week powerfailure last year (Seattle) our cell phones continued to work.

TM and hot-spot: T-mobile has glomed this new feature onto their current offereings without really addressing it as a new line of service. So their website doesn't really gear anything to this new feature. To them, it's just another cellphone, just one that is stationary with unlimited minutes. Examples: The voicemail prompt callers get ask if you would like to page this person (????). There are no web-based features common to other VOIP offerings. It's "you get what you pay for" here.

Compatability with old phones and answering machines: If you're like us and like the stand-alone answering machine, it may not work. Our 10yo Lucent, and 3 new answering machines that I bought and returned didn't work. The problem, I believe, is that the WRTU54G router's "hangup signal" (0 voltage) is too short, so the answering machines don't realize the caller has hang up. So at the end of every message there is 10 seconds of wailing busy signal. A similar problem with the "flash" function on our Panasonic 5.8GHz phones was solved by an astute TM tech support by finding an obscure config on the phone to decrease the flash duration sensitivity from 300ms (standard) to 90ms.

Router and VOIP: the router firmware has essentially no VOIP configurations. The above hang-up problem could be fixed on other routers by changing the CPC duration (how long the voltage goes to zero). Cisco/Linksys basically took a popular router architechture and stuck VOIP on it. As of today they still haven't posted their firmware sourcecode as they are required to do under the Gnu GPL (since it's based on Linux). They say they're working on it.

tmob cust

@comcast.net

t-mobile @home costs


The $10 per month T-mobile@home deal can end up costing existing t-mobile customers an additional $50 per month. If you have a t-mobile family plan with 5 existing lines, T-mobile requires you to either drop one of the lines or open up a new account at $39.99 per month in order to get the @Home service. It's not what it's a cranked up to be.

rcbrcb
Premium
join:2007-02-21
Chicago, IL

Re: t-mobile @home costs

Ad what does that have to do with my review of this product?

jupiter

join:2001-03-09
Chicago, IL
·Comcast

@home with comcast?

Am I able to get t@home if I have comcast internet? Currently I have Comcast for voice, internet and cable. It requires you to have a modem for voice as does @home. Thus, my question is would I be able to get voice service and have comcast internet work??? Do you have to have Tmobile wireless in order to get @home voice?

rcbrcb
Premium
join:2007-02-21
Chicago, IL
·DIRECTV
·RCN CABLE
·T-Mobile VoIP
·AT&T U-Verse
·T-Mobile US

Re: @home with comcast?

Yes, you can have the @Home Service with Comcast Internet. You HAVE to supply your own Internet Connection for this service to work & you have to have an @Home router, they have two models, a router with Wireless capabilites and a router witout Wireless. The Wireless Model can hadle two @Home Phone #'s and the Non-Wireless can have one Phone #.

Yes, you MUST have a T-Mobile Wireless account with a qualifing Wireless Minute Plan to qualify for the $10.00 per month @Home Service.

lrp

@ameritech.net

Re: @home with comcast?

Have you gotten the callerID on the TV to work? I had a temporary number on my @home router for a few days before my landline number was ported. During that time, there was a wrong number call to the temporary number. The callerID displayed on my TV but it hasn't done it since. T-Mobile told me that Comcast supports this but Comcast said it doesn't work. I also saw a comment on another discussion group that said it did work. ???

rcbrcb
Premium
join:2007-02-21
Chicago, IL
·DIRECTV
·RCN CABLE
·T-Mobile VoIP
·AT&T U-Verse
·T-Mobile US


1 edit

Re: @home with comcast?

said by lrp :

Have you gotten the callerID on the TV to work? I had a temporary number on my @home router for a few days before my landline number was ported. During that time, there was a wrong number call to the temporary number. The callerID displayed on my TV but it hasn't done it since. T-Mobile told me that Comcast supports this but Comcast said it doesn't work. I also saw a comment on another discussion group that said it did work. ???
I don't use Comcast, so I can't answer your question. The post I was responding to was just asking IF you could use the TMob @Home Service and my point was that you can use ANY ISP with this service.
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