<p><br>
On Dec 3, 2013 12:25 AM, "unsolicited" <<a href="mailto:unsolicited@swiz.ca">unsolicited@swiz.ca</a>> wrote:<br>
><br>
> FWIW, I've always thought it would be a bad idea. <br>
> If part of the point of vendor selection is to be vendor <br>
> independent, getting VoIP with your carrier, then maybe <br>
> having to move, seems counter-intuitive - if there are <br>
> other choices available.</p>
<p>I absolutely agree with this. Decoupling and minimizing dependencies is the best strategy. Bundling is bad, and makes moving away from a provider much harder.</p>
<p>><br>
> Khalid was looking into USB dongle VoIP thingies not long <br>
> ago - perhaps they have a role in your calling, too.</p>
<p>Magic Jack is still the cheapest option. You can get the device for $50 when on sale, add $10 if regular retail. For $30 a year you get free calling to Canada and the USA and a Canadian number with caller ID ...etc Moving your existing number to them is possible but some report delays and snafus that made me wary of doing so.</p>
<p>I settled on Ooma Telo, which are more reliable and quicker to port numbers, and offer a 60 day trial period (hardware is 30 days return via Bestbuy). </p>
<p>The monthly cost 3.99 a month for free Canada wide calling, and $10 more for USA which gives you an additional USA number, so relatives can call you for free, and many nice features. The device is $150 but is discounted to 130 and bundled with blue tooth for a headset.</p>
<p>Oh, and it is Linux based with the source on their web site!<br>
</p>