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How does VoIP work and what features do your phones
have?
Give this video link a play and the guys from
Cisco will go through our phones and their use for you.
Traditionally,
Voice and Internet services are delivered on two separate,
distinct networks.
It all started with "plain old telephone
service". Your home or business gets access to the
public voice
network via several different means. At your premises, in
addition to the actual telephones, there is also telephone
wiring, an internal switching system such as a Private Branch
Exchange (PBX), voicemail
system, call accounting system, and possibly more.
With the evolution of the Internet for data
communications, most businesses added an additional network.
Today, the phone or cable company
connects the
Internet to your local business network via a router. Data
cabling connects your desktop PC and devices, like printers and
scanners, to the local network.
So, it sounds complicated, but
what's the problem with having two separate networks?
Even if both
services are delivered over the same physical connection, they
must be segregated because they utilize different protocols,
technologies and
even tariffs. They are quite distinct and completely
independent.
Two systems means more equipment to buy and
maintain, which means more costs and more chances for things to
go wrong. Beyond that, these two systems
cannot serve
as backups for each
other up if one failed,
nor can they
provide any additional benefit to one another.
They couldn’t share capacity if
one was underutilized while the other was over utilized.
Furthermore, a separate company serviced your internal phone
system, and who do you blame when things go wrong?
But, we keep doing things this
way because that's how the technology developed, and the
technology needed to fully integrate these these two
networks has been evolving steadily, but still wasn't ready for
many businesses until recently.
Now, nypanet.com offers
you the world of Voice over IP!
nypanet.com offers technology
that is revolutionary and cutting edge - Voice over IP.
This technology enables the delivery of advanced
telecommunication services to every company – large and small,
single-site and distributed. It is the convergence of
voice and data communications into a single network using the
Internet.
When you use nypanet.com there is one company to turn to, whether it’s for your
Internet Access, your voice service, local and long distance,
your phone system, voicemail and more! One number to call, one
bill to review, one team to turn to when you have an issue. At
the same time, you have a redundant network, which dynamically
allows for more voice or data depending on which needs more
capacity!
How does Voice over IP work?
nypanet.com with VoIP Service, works using a technology
that routes your calls over the internet which is not taxed the
same way as existing voice lines..
VoIP means Voice over
Internet Protocol. VoIP is the actual
transmission of your calls over the Internet, to any destination on the
PSTN (Public Switched Telephone
Network) or to another VoIP provider.
VoIP service
allows you to make a call to any phone number - via the
Internet.
nypanet.com
Hosted IP-PBX Service converges voice and data communications
into a single, high reliability, tightly integrated network.
It provides simultaneous connection to the public Voice and
Internet networks, then it optimizes that network to support
Data and prioritize Voice between your existing data devices and
your next generation Internet phones.
nypanet.com
Voice over IP is usually sent over a dedicated broadband
connection to our network to ensure quality service.
What is Hosted VoIP. and why
would I prefer it?
Hosted PBX Service can be configured to
any size of business, whether it is a small, medium, or large
company as a replacement or to compliment with
the current analog, digital, key or PBX telephone system
that your business already has in place. The reason why your
will prefer it is because "You'll Never Buy a New Business
Telephone System Again", with this Revolutionary Hosted PBX
Business Telephone System which is available for any business
anywhere, for a moderate fee per month per seat or extension.
For more reasons why you would prefer Hosted VoIP, take a look
at this article from
August 4th VoIP
news.
What is SIP Trunking?
SIP Trunking is hooking up VoIP to your current analog telephone
system.
Click here for more information
How about an actual business case
example?
One of our customers has 48 offices
nationwide with an average of 72 people at each office.
Interoffice calling was as you could quite imagine a huge
expense. With Nypanet.com they can 4 digit dial anywhere
within the confines of there system at no additional cost.
That lead to an average savings of $900.00 per month per
location in just inter-office calling!
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$900.00 X 48=
$43,200.00 per month saved over standard Telco |
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What are the BENEFITS of Voice
over IP and merging Voice and Data on one network?
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* Cost
Savings * |
*
Flexibility * |
* Ease
of Use * |
*
Productivity * |
*
Mobility * |
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Initial expense equipment and
software is minimal - much less than a traditional PBX.
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Large long distance savings - you can 4-digit-dial all of your employees
over the Internet without toll charges.
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Reduce cost of maintaining two cabling systems - no more
telephone wiring, all
communications on LAN.
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Ease of installation
and use - you can maintain this system yourself without
calling the phone guy.
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With an intuitive web-based
configuration tool, system administration is simplified and
less costly.
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Faxes can be routed and forwarded
to any email address, you can even receive faxes on your cell phone.
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Internet faxes work without a fax
machine, so there is no machine to purchase or maintain.
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Disaster recovery can be done by simply
rerouting phone calls to alternate phones.
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With a
single point of contact for all your communications services,
changes and problem resolution are simplified.
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System can
replace or enhance your current system, works wherever you
have Broadband Internet service.
Now every business can have the the features and
capabilities of a high-end
enterprise communications network without the high costs of
acquisition and service.
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