I recently installed an ooma system in my home to act as a second line for work. So far I am very impressed.
For  those who are unfamiliar with ooma, it is a box that provides Voice  over IP (or VOIP): telephone service via the Internet. This is similar  to Vonage or Comcast Digital Voice. Rather than using the regular  telephone connection in to your home, the connection is digitized and  sent over the Internet. All VOIP systems are integrated with the Public  Switched Telephone Service (PSTN) so you can place calls to anyone with a  telephone even if you are using VOIP.
What sets ooma apart from  its competitors?  There's no monthly fee. None. And you can call any  number in the US free of charge. You must purchase one of their boxes,  and it costs a hefty $250. But once that initial purchase is made, all  your phone calls to anywhere in the US are free. There are limits, of  course. If ooma catches you using thousands of hours a month they  reserve the right to slap your hand and say "naughty boy, no biscuit"  and either start charging you money or cut you off from their network.  So if you had visions of opening up a telemarketing company using ooma,  forget it.
So what else do you get for no monthly fee? Standard  ooma service comes with one telephone number (which you get to choose  from a list of available numbers), caller ID, call waiting, voice mail,  and voice mail notifications via e-mail. If you want to keep your number  there is an additional one-time fee ($39.99) to transfer the number to  ooma. They also have a premier service, which does have a monthly fee  and which gets you some extra services. Premier includes things like an  instant second line (on the same phone number), three-way conferencing,  ring-through to another number, enhanced voice mail, and lots of other  interesting features. Ooma is hoping that enough people will want those  extra features to pay for them. Ooma also tries to get you hooked on the  extra features by giving away 60 days of Premier service for free to  first-time users.
The box is a nice shiny silver, with some buttons on the front. These  buttons allow you direct access to voicemail (without picking up the  phone) and other features. The lights in the buttons show you when  voicemail is waiting and what lines are in use. The standard package  also comes with a smaller box, the ooma "scout". This is a companion to  the main ooma box and can be used to provide VOIP service directly to  another phone. The two boxes communicate with each over over the  existing phone wiring without interfering with anything else that might  be on the line. I haven't tried out my scout yet as I only need my line  in one room.
The ooma box was pretty easy to set up. I spent  about 10 minutes on their website to activate the box. This required  giving them my name and address, and choosing a phone number. I didn't  give them a credit card number since their service is free. Once on-line  setup was complete I was ready to plug in the box. One plug connects to  an Ethernet and another connects to a regular telephone. Once powered  on the box takes about a minute to get connected with the ooma servers.  Once that happens the light on the back turns solid blue and the phone  has a dial tone. It's that simple.
In case you are concerned  about safety, ooma provides E911 services. The web signup asks for name  and address, then registers the information with emergency 911  services.. If you need to call 911 from the ooma phone, the emergency  operator will automatically know your address.
So how is the  sound quality? So far it is superb, just as good as a land line.  Initially I had some problems with a bad echo on my end of the  connection, but I switched phones and that problem seems to have gone  away. Of course a poor or busy Internet connection will cause call  quality to suffer. And VOIP service is not recommended if your Internet  connection isn't at least 3 Megabits per second "down" (traffic coming  in to your house) and 512 Kilobits per second "up" (traffic leaving your  house). Most cable Internet subscribers will have no problem meeting  those minimums. DSL subscribers (like me) have to make sure that they  have signed up for a fast connection.
The other concern with any VOIP system is contention with other Internet  traffic. If you are downloading the latest Everquest or playing World  of Warcraft, most of your available network "bandwidth" is going to be  soaked up, and VOIP quality will suffer. The ooma box is able to give  its own data priority over others, but only if it is connected  correctly. The instructions that come with the box are pretty clear, so I  won't repeat them here. More complicated network installations (like  mine) pose more of a challenge. Maybe once I figure out the best way to  "fine tune" my network for ooma I will write another blog entry that  goes in to some detail.
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