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Printer Technology

VoIP Solution for Faxing? 50

mbathgate asks: "In the world of residential academia, cell phone proliferation is so immense that at many schools they've pulled the plug on landline long distance service, including mine. I have a cell phone, but I can't fax through it, and dialing 29 digits for every fax is a real pain (few faxes are local, especially in Los Angeles). I need a finger-saving solution, but I don't want a web or email-based service, for a number of different reasons, mostly legal and security-related (please save me the flaming - the decision is made). VoIP looks very attractive to me, though, with a 100baseTX port in my room connected to a huge pipe. Slashdot has covered switching to VoIP before, but the focus has been mostly voice calls. I've hunted around on a few different sites, but haven't come across anything which assures me that VoIP would work for my situation. I need a solution for high quality outgoing calls to landlines which can connect to my existing fax machine (RJ11 port). It must be Mac OS X compatible or OS-independent. An incoming number would be nice, since it would let me receive faxes without being there to manually press 'Receive', but considering our anal-retentive firewall policies, getting it to work outgoing would be a good start. Does Slashdot have some experience with faxing via VoIP that they'd like to share?"
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VoIP Solution for Faxing?

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Of course not, you have posted to Ask Slaskdot.

    VoIP services that run 64kbps and up mostly support faxing.

    VoIP Faing from modems is less reliable because modems tend to be looser with the spec / timing then hardware faxes.

    A search of any VoIP forum would have turned up these results.
  • Can't read? (Score:5, Informative)

    by rthille ( 8526 ) <web-slashdot@@@rangat...org> on Friday February 27, 2004 @11:52PM (#8414339) Homepage Journal
    http://www.vonage.com/features_fax.php

    vonage works with FAX machines.
    • I've done this with vonage and also called a dial-up through it and connected at 14k or so. The connection didn't last long but it was interesting to see that the VoIP protocols didn't consider modem tones 'noise.'
  • What's so hard? (Score:5, Informative)

    by addaon ( 41825 ) <addaon+slashdot.gmail@com> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @12:08AM (#8414392)
    How much are you faxing? Kinkos and the equivalent will fax for about 20 cents a page... so you can do 100 pages a month for $20. If you're faxing more than that -- and I can't imagine why, these days -- why not just get a cell phone with a fax port? From your message, I assume you already have a cell phone; a $50 one time investment (these phones are pretty cheap on ebay and such; they're generally pretty old) and no additional monthly fee seems pretty good.
  • eFax (Score:2, Offtopic)

    by GreenKiwi ( 221281 )
    What about eFax?

    http://www.efax.com/ [efax.com]

    Do all your faxing over the internet. Not sure about security, but I'd imagine that they've worked something out.

    kiwi
    • The other problem with eFax is spam... I had a paid account long ago and am still getting 3-4 emails a week about upgrading my service or offers from "trusted partners"

      highly obnoxious.
  • Locality (Score:4, Insightful)

    by toast0 ( 63707 ) <slashdotinducedspam@enslaves.us> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @01:02AM (#8414593)
    just because you have to do ten digit dialing doesn't make it non-local.

    Of course, a lot of the area you might need to fax with is going to be intra-lata/zone3/local toll/whatever the hell they're calling it now, where on a typical residential line it would be more than a local call, but not go through your long distance carrier. I have no idea if you can make those calls or not, but you can give somebody a headache by asking them :)

  • quicknet.net (Score:5, Informative)

    by pg133 ( 307365 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @03:41AM (#8415287)

    [NOTE: This is not a recommendation since I have never used their products]

    You could check out:

    INTERNET PHONEJACK [quicknet.net]

    "With the Internet PhoneJACK, you can use your familiar telephone (including your cordless phone) to make and receive Internet phone calls. You can plug your standard analog telephone, fax machine or headset into the Internet PhoneJACK and keep your Internet phone calls private."

    They appear to support linux

    or on the same website:

    iprint2Fax [quicknet.net]

    • Re:quicknet.net (Score:3, Interesting)

      by michael_cain ( 66650 )

      [NOTE: This is not a recommendation since I have never used their products]

      You could check out:

      INTERNET PHONEJACK

      Not particularly relevant to the fax issue, but their echo cancellation used to be spectacularly good. When I was doing applied research work at a large phone company, we tested an early version of the hardware that we picked up at a trade show using our prototype voice-over-IP software and open-air microphones and speakers. In full-duplex mode, we could place a microphone within a cou

    • Thanks for the link. I have been looking for a solution like this for my sat rec. Dish charges me $5/mo for not having a landline. Time to set up one of my old PCs with the internet phone jack!
  • Really a non-issue (Score:5, Informative)

    by jaredcat ( 223478 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @05:32AM (#8415550)
    Most modern VoIP equipment automagically supports faxings. Its built into the spec for pretty much any H323 or SIP device that you are going to buy that has come out in the past few years.

    You'd be suprised how many of your so-called analog or land-line calls are being VOIPed around the Internet anyway. The company I work at (a mid-sized telecommunications carrier) uses fairly standard equipment for this-- Cisco AS5850s and 7206VXRs among other things... Its really quite transparent to the end user when the call is being transported VoIP, both for voice and for faxes.

  • by Degrees ( 220395 ) <degreesNO@SPAMgerisch.me> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @05:57AM (#8415597) Homepage Journal
    First they had it, then they dropped it, and now its back again. Net2Phone CommCenter [net2phone.com]

    Doesn't receive faxes, and is a Windows-only client. Looks like $0.10 per page.

  • by foniksonik ( 573572 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @05:58AM (#8415599) Homepage Journal
    Why would you want this? Why not use a fax emulator over normal IP... [ncoretech.com]

    Seriously... VOIP seems like an abstraction over an abstraction... it's all data, why not go straight to the source so to speak and simply send out a fax signal directly?
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @08:47AM (#8415979)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • is probably the easiest.

    Your comment about needing a finger-saving solution, but I don't want a web or email-based service, for a number of different reasons, mostly legal and security-related (please save me the flaming - the decision is made). doesn't make sense though and this isn't a flame. Unless you are hosting the opposite ends and encrypting, you still might as well just send a post card since you've thrown security out the window.

  • If you're only sending an occasional fax, you might be able to convince your department secretary or some other school official to let you use their fax. It helps also if you can do them a favor, like fix their computer for them.

    Also, if you're faxing resumes, try your campus career center.
  • V.150 Modem over IP (Score:5, Informative)

    by Drishmung ( 458368 ) on Sunday February 29, 2004 @05:47AM (#8421651)
    Keep an eye out for V.150 (Modem over IP) support, which does exactly what you want as I understand it---except that there are not yet a lot of implementations.

    This PDF [surf-com.com] has some more info.

    V.150 is useful for other things than just faxes---security systems and environmental monitoring for instance. It's going to be a whole lot easier to accomodate existing systems by implementing V.150 in the new VoIP kit rather than waiting for everything to become IP enabled.

  • E-mail please. (Score:1, Insightful)

    by trafik ( 707566 )
    I just don't understand why so many people are still shackled to fax machines. Buy a scanner, scan your document, and e-mail it.

    They will come out the other end with much higher quality *and* the recipient will thank you for giving them the choice as to how to store it (i.e. store it electronically, or print-and-file).

    Just a thought...
    • Fax machines, in my experience, just work. Stick the paper in the feeder, dial the number and press "send".

      As opposed to finding a PC with a scanner. Discovering that the drivers and bundled software are hosed and nobody knows where the scanner software CD is. Or if it does work, it creates a huge file in some format that other programs can't read or crash when they try to read it. You finally get a scan in a file and attach it to an email message, only to discover that it gets bounced for being too big,

    • I just don't understand why so many people are still shackled to fax machines. Buy a scanner, scan your document, and e-mail it.

      They will come out the other end with much higher quality *and* the recipient will thank you for giving them the choice as to how to store it (i.e. store it electronically, or print-and-file).


      I did this for a while as a method of forwarding important mail to my parents while they were on vacation. The procedure usually went something like this:

      1) Scan document. This usually i
  • Sort of funny to see us going from computer plugged into phone jack to phone jack plugged into computer (or network)
  • I use eFax. Not sure about alternative OS, but windows client is pretty good. It works mostly through e-mail, sending .efx files to your email and a specially formatted e-mail address for outgoing. The .efx format seems to just be tiff with some metadata...
  • Working Solutions (Score:4, Informative)

    by WilliamX ( 22300 ) on Monday March 01, 2004 @06:54PM (#8434558)

    Setup an asterisk pbx server [digium.com], and signup with any number of VoIP providers who support G.711 codecs (like Voicepulse [voicepulse.com] or their no bells service, Voicepulse Connect [voicepulse.com] service). Plug your fax machine into a TDM400p card [digium.com] from digium.

    Another option, pickup a Grandstream HandyTone 286 [grandstream.com] (from here for instance [yahoo.com]) or a Sipura SPA-2000 [sipura.com] (from here for instance [pulver.com]) (SIP devices, plug a regular phone, or fax, into it) instead of the asterisk box, but it gives you less flexibility. Both devices would work with the Voicepulse services, or most any other true SIP based VoIP service.

    This works, been able to fax to people over Pulver's Free World Dialup service [pulver.com] without any problems using both types of setup.

  • Cisco ATA 186 [cisco.com] lists for $170, but check the street for a better deal.
  • email a PDF (Score:2, Interesting)

    people still use fax machines? does analog-over-digital-over-internet-over-digital seem dumb to anyone else?

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