New York City Hotel Guide



             


Thursday, March 13, 2008

Hotels Using VoIP

Hotels Using VoIP

The days of expensive hotel phone bills are over, with the rise of more and more hotels offering broadband Internet service to their customer, internet telephone use is on the rise. With a broadband connection provided by the hotel, users can now use Voice over Internet Protocol or VoIP to stay connected with their family, friends and office. This is especially good news to oversea travelers as the rate to call back to the United States is extremely high in most international hotels. While most hotels do have a charge to access the Internet, the charge is usually much lower than the cost of making just one 10 minute call to the US.

The Residence Inn in New Haven Conneticutt has become one of the first hotels to offer free VoIP service to their customers. Adam Dubroff of TravelGlue, the company that wired the Residence Inn for VoIP, told CNN. "Until now, hotel guests have paid a premium for the convenience of long distance service, which was appropriate when there were no cell phones and it really was a convenience."

Dubroff continued, "But as technology has developed, it has become an old business model and the prices charged have been rendered exorbitant. Now, because of VoIP, there is an opportunity to provide guests with a phone service for free and I think this will be the norm in the future."

The Wynn in Las Vegas has taken the VoIP technology to the fullest extreme offering reservations, hotel information and more right from a touch screen VoIP phone. Plus when a user accesses the broadband Internet the Wynn offers, they can use their personal VoIP service for only the cost of the Internet access.

Many VoIP providers allow users to take their service with them wherever they travel. Skype offers a free VoIP service that can be used directly with a user's computer and broadband Internet connection, allowing it to be accessed virtually anywhere and anytime. No additional equipment is needed to use Skype, but Skype users can only call other Skype customers for free. Calling regular phone numbers still result in a charge.

Vonage allows customers to travel with their phone adapter, which they can then just plug into their computer and broadband Internet, giving them the same Internet phone service that they receive at home. Vonage offers a couple of plans to choose from, with their unlimited local and long distance service coming in at under $25.00 per month.

"Communication was always an issue with expats working overseas. Satellite telephones have helped me to keep in touch with my family but the per minute cost prohibited long or chatty calls," says Thomas Drown, a geologist working in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. "Now, I can talk to anyone in the world who has either a phone or an Internet connection. Now I can call my mom in Canada from my western Mongolia field office any time of the day or night for just eight cents a minute."

Broadband phone service, offered through WiFi hot-spots and high speed internet service is the wave of the future. With voice over internet protocol now recieving main stream acceptance with the residential and business communities, look for VoIP services to start showing up in most hotel chains in the near future.

Dana www.calling-plans.com

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