sipgate
sipgate is a Voice over IP service provider based in Germany that also operates in Austria, United Kingdom and, as of June 2009,[1] in the USA.
The service offers free calls between sipgate users. In addition it offers fee-based calling packages for calls to domestic and international destinations. The service is supported by user accounts on an online portal that assigns free geographical and non-geographical phone numbers[2]. Users may use any Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) client software, SIP analog telephony adapter (ATA), or hardware SIP phones with the service. SIP phones and other associated hardware from a variety of manufacturers are available for sale at the sipgate web site.
In January 2006, Sipgate began providing their customers short message services (SMS) through their website. Users may set the originating phone number to be that of their mobile phone.
sipgate's website offers a fax service that provides users the feature of sending faxes[3]. A user may upload a Portable Document Format (PDF) file or compose a document with an online editor application. Certain plans also include an extension for receiving fax documents. Faxes may be downloaded or emailed as a PDF file. With a suitable fax-enabled VoIP adapter faxes may also be sent from fax machines.
Until 2007, sipgate also peered free of charge with a number of other VoIP providers, e.g., freenet iPhone, FreeWorldDialup, IAXtel, however this service was discontinued.
Through its website, Sipgate provides a software application, entitled sipgate, that may be installed on the Apple iPhone. In September 2008, the Higher Regional Court of Hamburg (Germany) sided with a request by T-Mobile and issued an injunction preventing the download of sipgate, barring iPhone owners from placing calls over the device's Internet connection rather than over T-Mobile's cellphone network. In counter action, sipgate won an injunction against T-Mobile to bar it from advertising unlimited Internet access via the device.[4]
On May 4, 2011 sipgate announced that it had chosen the open-source project Yate for the core of its softswitch infrastructure.[5]
US service
On June 2, 2009 sipgate started offering service in the United States under the product names sipgate one and sipgate team.[1]
The sipgate one service is free for calls between sipgate customers and for all inbound calls. It provides one free phone number to customers, and offers additional numbers that can be associated with an account as an extra extension. Initially, the free numbers are provided from a small pool of U.S. LATAs, but will be replaced with a customer's preferred area code when these become available. TMC Labs reported that the web-based service interface provides full access to voicemail messages, call recordings, and faxes.[1] sipgate one supports setting up direct IP-to-IP calls, permitting compatible phones to use wideband voice codecs.[6]
The sipgate team service is a business-targeted subscription service at several different service tiers, primarily distinguished by the number of telephone numbers included, and the number of possible extensions, users, groups, and locations. In addition, it offers hosted virtual PBX features with voicemail, fax, and multiple auto attendants.
Sipgate.com ran out of new US based DID numbers in Fall 2011 and has since been unable to get new numbers assigned, preventing sipgate from issuing new accounts.[citation needed]
References
- ^ a b c Tom Keating. "sipgate enters U.S VoIP Broadband Market offering free calls". TMCnet. Retrieved 2009-06-30.
- ^ Oakes, Chris (2004-08-27). "In Internet phone calls, broadband's 'killer application'". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 2007-05-04.
- ^ "sipgate Fax Services". Retrieved 2009-06-23.
- ^ German court bans VoIP on iPhone, September 11, 2008, CBC News
- ^ "Press release: sipgate chooses open source project Yate for core infrastructure". Retrieved 2011-12-03.
- ^ Michael Graves. "Making Use of Wideband Voice Right Now!: SIPGate". Retrieved 2009-06-30.
External links