Telephony University

Telephony University

Join us for an in-depth day on Deep Packet Inspection. Telephony University presents three Webcasts and an interactive panel of experts to explore all things DPI. You’ll hear from the industry professionals leading the way and participate in Q+A with our experts.

Learn more
         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines     

Truphone intercepts global mobile calls

more on the topic

More Related Articles

Alternative mobile service provider Truphone launched a service today that automatically “re-routes” international calls that begin on incumbent operator networks and delivers them via the Internet and the Truphone network.

Truphone’s core offering is a mobile calling service that leverages smartphones, such as Nokia E-Series devices, that can run its client software and access the Internet via integrated WiFi – essentially a WiFi-enabled mobile VoIP solution.

The new service, dubbed Truphone Anywhere, detects when a mobile user is making an international call out of range of a local WiFi hotspot. In that situation, the Truphone software makes a local call – over the telco network – to the nearest Truphone server. Truphone then uses its network to route and terminate the call over the Internet.

Customers pay for the local Truphone call – typically “free” if part of a bundled minutes plan. They also pay for the Truphone portion of the call, but at much lower rates than a typical mobile international call. For example, a typical 10-minute call through a US carrier to a Chinese landline phone would cost $34.90 using AT&T International Dial Standard rates; the same call would cost $0.60 using the Truphone Anywhere approach.

While few callers would pay the full rate for a US-to-China call – using cheaper avenues such as calling cards instead – the Truphone Anywhere solution makes placing cheap overseas calls much easier, the company said.

The default setting for the Truphone Anywhere client software routes international calls made from a user’s home country only. The software can also be set to check tariffs when roaming abroad and placing international calls.

Truphone is one of a new breed of “new mobile service providers” that Telephony profiled earlier this year. Its charter is to leverage a wide array of access technologies – including WiFi, WiMax, 3G data and more – to provide software-enabled calling via its voice-over-IP network, according to James Body, Truphone’s research director.

“If you look at people like us, we’ll do a number of deals with access players who own spectrum,” Body said in an interview earlier this year. “Some will be WiFi, others will have licensed spectrum, but there will be more operators piling in, and prices will keep going down. It will be our role to aggregate together wireless transmission means and make it work for the end user.”


Commenting terms of use blog comments powered by Disqus
Get Updates Via Email

related resources

popular articles

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2008 Penton Media Inc.

White Papers

WHITE PAPER

Are You Letting Hot Prospects Go to the Competition?

You spend millions of dollars on marketing campaigns to trigger consumer interest in your services. Find out how some communications carriers are increasing conversion rates. DOWNLOAD NOW

Podcasts

PODCAST

A Telephony Podcast: Qwest Communications launched its qHome Portal

Qwest Communications launched its qHome Portal this week, uniting its Qwest Choice Home voice service and its DSL-based high-speed Internet service through Microsoft’s Windows Live LISTEN

Blogs

BLOG

Infinera: What spending slowdown?

Optical equipment vendor Infinera is apparently not seeing the same broad carrier spending slowdown related to economic uncertainty that other vendors are reporting.READ

E-Books

E-BOOK

Broadband for the Masses from Motorola

This e-book provides insights on how fixed broadband wireless services can provide affordable solutions in an unlicensed spectrum. READ NOW!

TV

TV

Interview with Jim Hansen of Embarq at NXTcomm08

Tune in to Telephony TV to watch an interview with Embarq's Jim Hansen at NXTcomm08. WATCH IT NOW.

  • Telephony Content
  • Telephony Content

current issue

Current Issue

December 1, 2008

The next network frontier offers new opportunities for service providers. Read Now

more news

Global >>

MORE

Ethernet >>

MORE

Independent >>

MORE

IPTV >>

MORE

IMS >>

MORE

WiMax >>

MORE

VOIP >>

MORE

FTTX >>

MORE

Access >>

MORE

Broadband >>

MORE

Wireless >>

MORE

Software >>

MORE

Podcasts >>

MORE

Get Updates Via Email

Browse Issues

  • December 1, 2008
  • November 1, 2008
  • October 1, 2008
  • September 1, 2008
  • July 14, 2008
  • June 30, 2008
  • Jun 16, 2008