Last week I started to enumerate my phone numbers and I wound up discussing Google’s GrandCentral telephony service with considerable enthusiasm. While some people, such as reader and fellow Twitterer Allen Clarkson, are big fans, not everyone is quite as enthusiastic.
"Jim" commented on Gibbslog, "GC has a very bad feature called call presentation. If you receive a call, you MUST press 1 . . . before you can take the
incoming call. If you have a [headset on with a Bluetooth link to your phone] this is almost impossible while driving or if
your hands are busy. This ‘feature’ cannot be turned off.”
That is a valid point, and it would certainly be a good idea for GrandCentral to add voice recognition for selected devices.
Anyway, I wound up at the end of last week’s column with a total of seven phone numbers: house, office and fax (such as it is) via Vonage, local dial-only POTS line for DSL, GrandCentral number, and a Gizmo5 line. This week I added a new one: a magicJack number.
MagicJack is a rather clever device that offers unlimited VoIP calling over the Internet in North American for $39.95 for the first year and $19.95 for subsequent years, and includes voice mail, 911 support, caller ID and free 411 service.
The magicJack hardware is a USB dongle about the size of a box of matches that weighs less than one ounce (as the device is a little large the company also provides an extension cable for the USB socket). The dongle provides hardware support for some VoIP protocol decoding and telephony management, and a phone jack on its side allows you to optionally connect a regular telephone handset. Windows XP and Vista are supported, and beta firmware for OS X has just been released.
The first time you insert the magicJack into a USB port it glows a pleasant blue and all of the required drivers are downloaded from its on-board storage.
(I must digress here and complain about hardware manufacturers that use blinding blue LEDs. Yes, they are a cool color and, yes, they are easy to see. But they are so damn bright! On my desk I have a docking station for my PDA that’s just below eye level. I had to put electrical tape over the LED because it was bright enough to give me radiation burns.)
Once all of the drivers have been installed the MagicJack thinks to itself for a while and, voilà! a softphone interface appears. You then go through a registration process and you get to pick a number from what appears to be any of the majority of metropolitan areas.
The softphone interface is pretty good, recording all incoming and outgoing numbers, allowing you to select the location to associate with 911 calls, switch between using a handset and the PC’s microphone and speakers, and so on.
The call quality was excellent -- several people I dialed commented on how “live” the connection sounded. I experienced a few setup issues but, given that my PCs are home to a bizarre collection of software, I might have been pushing the envelope of compatibility somewhat.
That said, if you run into problems, MagicJack’s LivePerson chat-based tech support (the only choice the company offers) is not going to make you happy: They are the usual bunch of poorly skilled, outsourced, customer disservice droids that can barely understand what you’re asking and don’t seem to care. Add to that MagicJack’s horrible Web site, which uses the kind of marketing Ron Popeill would have been proud of, and you have an odd result: a device with incredible potential and value but backed by second-rate presentation and support.