Saturday, June 27, 2009

Google Voice

Google just keeps rolling out services left and right. And it's all free at that. Is it a good thing? What is Google Voice? In a nutshell, it's a virtual telephone number that can be forwarded to your cell phone, business phone, second cell phone, etc. based on rules such as business calls go to your business phone while your family and friends have their calls sent to your personal cell phone or spammers blocked.

As usual Google has copied the Apple approach to explaining their products/services -- simple and straightforward with a video clip.







Here's an article:


Google Voice ramps up but no word yet on number portability
Google begins inviting users to try Google VoiceBy
Google Subnet on Thu, 06/25/09 - 5:53pm.

Google is
a sneeze away from launching its anticipated Google Voice service beyond the customers it inherited when it acquired GrandCentral in 2007. Invitations are being sent to users who requested them starting today, the Official Google Blog announced. But the one big question on everyone's mind is when will it offer number portability? No word yet on that.
Google Voice is a service that allows you to link all of your phones to a single number, even offering voicemail integrated with e-mail. Best of all, its free. (See video below.) Those lucky enough to be using Google voice already rave about it, although it still has one limitation -- you can only use it to send incoming calls from Google Voice to other numbers. You can't yet take your existing number and move it to Google Voice. So to use it today, you need change your phone number. Google recently snagged
1 million new phone numbers from its provider, Level 3 in anticipation of rolling out these invites today. So, the question is, with invites rolling, when with number portability kick in? The Google Voice feature page doesn't name portability as an option yet.

But,
reports TechCrunch, Google is working on it and will be offering number portability when the service goes live in a bigger way later this year. However, the features page does an amazing, perhaps all, of the features you would expect for a paid VoiP service like tons of call management options. Plus it offers voice to text transcription for voicemail and voicemail screening -- a feature that was lost when answering machines of ages past were replaced by voicemail. (See video.)

1 comments:

Amy Hass said...
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