Interesting People mailing list archives

Getting Around the Hotel Voice Costs


From: Dave Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2003 04:58:25 -0700

I use a cell phone .. dave () farber net

------ Forwarded Message
From: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne () warpspeed com>


[Note:  This item comes from reader Dave Hughes.  What Dave neglected
to mention is that as long as his Vonage device is connected to the
Net, you can also call him on his Vonage assigned phone number.  That
number follows you around wherever you are.  I've done the same thing
that Dave has and once got a call from Tonga that way.  DLH]

At 23:41 -0700 4/22/03, Dave Hughes wrote:
From: "Dave Hughes" <dave () oldcolo com>
To: "'Dewayne-Net Technology List'" <dewayne-net () warpspeed com>
Subject: Getting Around the Hotel Voice Costs
Date: Tue, 22 Apr 2003 23:41:01 -0700
MIME-Version: 1.0


Hurrah! I fooled the Westin Hotel, Santa Clara with my Vonage VOIP!!!

As anyone who travels much and has to stay in major chain hotels, you
increasingly get ripped off when making long distance calls from hotel
rooms - either voice calls or modem calls. Not only do you pay the long
distance charges, but hotels charge surcharges, and even up front
charges to 'initialize' long distance calling. From 10 cents a minute
up to $1 a minute.

Now of course, many of the chains now offer, from your room 'high speed'
internet connection - for like $9.95 a day. Which, on top of a $150 a
day room, IF you can go out to the net high speed - not telephone
modem long distance dial - and get your email and spam, and browse the
net,  that's an acceptable flat rate charge for temporary high speed
internet when you are on the road.

I have done that many times. But THIS time I brought my VOIP Cisco AT
186 Vonage service and a small touchtone phone to plug into it (hotel
phones with their fancy dual line setups I wouldn't trust) AND a small 4
by 6 inch
Netgear router.

So I initialized the Internet Service in my room by plugging its
ethernet into my laptop, turned it on, ran the browser which
automatically comes up with the 'offer' screen. I accepted the offer and
immediately  went out on the net and read/answered my email browsed a
bit.

THEN having already plugged in my travelling phone to the Cisco AT186,
powered it up, connected it by ethernet to a port on the router, plugged
the Hotel ethernet into the router 'upstream port' added a Second
ethernet between it and my computer, and finally powered up the router.

Well, as expected ( a few retries to get the sequence right) the
router took the DHCP ip address from the hotel net, and the router gave
out the two public (192.168.0.x) DHCP addresses to my laptop and the
Cisco AT 186, I pinged out to see if all was well. It was. So picked up
the telephone handset and placed a call to back home, it rang, and I
conversed just fine WHILE ALSO using my laptop on the net.

The VOIP voice call was essentially free ( being already covered by the
flat monthly rate of $40 for unlimited calls across the US and Canada,
and the $9.95 fast internet connection served both the VOIP device AND
my laptop at the same time, broadband. I used both for almost 3 hours,
catching up with my work.

And I managed to make NO long distance - in fact any - voice phone calls
from my room!

Perfectly legal and ethical. Just avoiding the gouging hotels now
administer for voice callers from hotel room phones. VOIP, your time is
here.

Just a Hack I have been waiting to try since I got my home Vonage VOIP.
Cause I will have to be doing lots of travelling the next six months.

Dave Hughes
dave () oldcolo com

Archives at: <http://Wireless.Com/Dewayne-Net>
Weblog at: <http://weblog.warpspeed.com>


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