Who’s Afraid of Google Voice?

I admit, Google Voice is a bit geeky. Most people think it’s a replacement for Skype. It’s not.

Skype enables you to place calls from a computer using Voice over IP (VoIP). When you initiate a Google Voice call from a web page, GV calls your phone and connects you to the number you dialed. (You can also place a call by phoning your Google number and pressing 2 at the prompt.) The confusion results because Google Voice also lets you make international calls at rates that are competitive with Skype’s.

One feature my wife just discovered is that Google Voice also lets you make free long distance calls within the continental United States. For example, let’s say you don’t have long distance on your land line. You can use Google Voice to make long distance calls and you’re only charged for calling a local number (assuming your Google number is a local call).

So why is AT&T afraid of Google Voice on the iPhone? You don’t save any cell phone minutes by placing long distance calls with Google Voice. Some have speculated that it’s because GV offers free SMS, which cuts into AT&T’s bottom line. But there are plenty of other iPhone applications that offer free text messaging.

Is it because Google Voice lets you make cheap international calls? Skype does this too - without using any cell phone minutes.

The only possible conclusion is that AT&T is simply afraid of Google Voice’s potential. It’s a preemptive strike against Google, and it will fail for the same reason the RIAA’s lawsuits failed to stop music piracy. You can’t stop progress.

If you want to know more about placing calls with Google Voice, check out the following video:

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This entry was posted on Friday, July 31st, 2009 at 11:59 AM and is filed under Software, iPhone. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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