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posted by martyb on Wednesday March 30 2016, @05:34PM   Printer-friendly

Google has launched a phone/landline service for its Google Fiber customers, called Fiber Phone. It allows you to use a "cloud-based" phone number from any tablet, PC, or phone:

For $10/month, you get unlimited local and nationwide calling, and the same affordable rates as Google Voice for international calls. You can keep your old phone number, or pick a new one. You can use call waiting, caller ID, and 911 services just as easily as you could before. Fiber Phone can also make it easier to access your voicemail—the service will transcribe your voice messages for you and then send as a text or email.

[...] Your Fiber Phone number lives in the cloud, which means that you can use it on almost any phone, tablet or laptop. It can ring your landline when you're home, or your mobile device when you're on-the-go. [...] To stay updated on the latest, sign up here.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by frojack on Wednesday March 30 2016, @05:49PM

    by frojack (1554) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday March 30 2016, @05:49PM (#324919) Journal

    Does this mean Google Voice is on the way out, or is going to cost $10 a month soon?

    Because I use Google Voice this way, with a Obihai device [obihai.com], for free calls (incoming and outgoing) anywhere in the US and Canada, and dirt cheap calls world wide.

    Been using this for almost 5 years now as my only "home phone".
    http://blog.obihai.com/2014/09/google-voice-and-obihai-update.html [obihai.com]
    Can even send faxes (remember those) on it.

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  • (Score: 2) by jdavidb on Wednesday March 30 2016, @05:52PM

    by jdavidb (5690) on Wednesday March 30 2016, @05:52PM (#324922) Homepage Journal
    I hope not, I just started using Google voice last month. And I'm definitely not in a Google fiber territory.
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  • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Wednesday March 30 2016, @06:02PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Wednesday March 30 2016, @06:02PM (#324930)

    Me too, I've had an Obihai with Google Voice for a couple of years now... I assumed Google Voice was just a "Google Service" like + and all the rest. It can't use as much bandwidth as YouTube.

    Maybe the $10/month is a service fee for people who aren't comfortable setting up and maintaining their own VoIP box and using it as their only "landline" - and perhaps the $10/month also goes toward 911 system compatibility.

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    • (Score: 2) by frojack on Wednesday March 30 2016, @06:52PM

      by frojack (1554) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday March 30 2016, @06:52PM (#324955) Journal

      I think you are right, the $10 probably is regulation fee recovery, such as Emergency 911 Cost Recovery, Regulatory Recovery Fee, Federal, State and Local Services fees and such. All that stuff that is tacked onto phone bills.

      Google Talk has not been selling itself as a phone service, but rather just a answering machine service for cellular phones, (with free-ish voip calling tacked on). It makes no pretense of handling 911, because it was originally tied to your phone and only handled incoming calls. (They have since slipped in outgoing via the app).

      Every year I get an email telling me "Good news, another year of free google voice". I was worried this would end, and they would start charging for it.

      If I need 911, I just grab my cell phone. Our county dispatchers have Phase 2 location, handset generated, (for all cellular carriers in this area) so its accurate to 50 meters.

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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 30 2016, @06:11PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 30 2016, @06:11PM (#324936)

    Yes and no.

    This does not mean much wrt to Google voice, it is about Google Fiber going for the trifecta of internet, tv and phone.

    But gvoice is being phased out, or transformed, depending on how you choose to view it - google wants gvoice users to move to google hangouts which does everything gvoice does, but not exactly the same way, and lets you do voip calling on android handsets too. Since google killed SIP access to gvoice a couple of years ago, that is an improvement over recent history but still not as good as longer-term history.

    There is also Google Fi [google.com]which is a cell phone service that is abstracted from the cellular network, it prefers wifi but also uses a couple of different cellular networks depending on things like cost and signal strength.

    • (Score: 2) by frojack on Wednesday March 30 2016, @07:51PM

      by frojack (1554) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday March 30 2016, @07:51PM (#324975) Journal

      Actually, its not at all clear that Google Voice is being phased out.
      There were rumors of this back in 2014, but those have largely subsided by now, as Google laid them to rest.

      Hangouts is what really is being scaled back. They are dropping sms and mms support, but still keeping wifi calling to other hangouts users. They have a POTS bridge in hangouts to access land lines.

      But you need to add the Google Hangouts Dialer [google.com] to call anything except another hangouts user. And that dialer is something of a split personality.

      Oddly, if you DO add the Hangouts Dialer, AND you already have a Google Voice Number, it will use Google Voice rather than the Hangouts-to-voip bridge. (You will see that right above the key-pad when you select manual dialing in Hangouts Dialer)

      Your Caller id will show up as your GV number, instead of your cellular number, and call backs will go to your google voice number. If you don't have a google voice number, caller ID will be your cell number, and call backs will go to your cell minutes.

      And if you don't have a cellular plan, and just use a wifi tablet, or smartphone without a sim, ? who knows...

      So the whole thing is a huge bowl of spaghetti right now, and google has two products that separately or in conjunction don't really handle all the functions properly. They probably need to start over, because hangouts was over-scoped, and never did much of anything properly or smoothly, and GV languished for way too long.

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