NodePhone Goes National Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Thursday, 13 March 2008
National ISP Internode has reached a major milestone in its VoIP service roll-out and is now able to offer a full national reach for its NodePhone2 voice-over-broadband service. The service now extends to 2100 zones covering Australia's smallest regional areas.

This has allowed the company to offer a national 18-cent untimed call rate to any fixed phone in the country and to provide subscribers with a local number in any phone zone in the country. At the same time it has also more than quadrupled the coverage of its newly MultiLine service, which provides on-demand access to extra phone channels. Internode has added an additional 121 zones to the original 37 it offered to make 158 zones.

The company says its extensive reach places its service above most other Internet-based VoIP services, which only offer phone numbers in major metropolitan areas and NodePhone product manager, Jim Kellett, says the extended reach is part of Internode's commitment to regional customers. "Most VoIP services only offer in-dial numbers for metropolitan centres or, at best, large regional towns," he said. "While that suits some people, it is frustrating for potential regional customers whose next door neighbour may have to pay for a "long distance" call to reach them by phone.

"To solve this problem, Internode has worked for more than a year to add the capability for new NodePhone2 customers to select their NodePhone2 telephone number in any local calling zone in the country. That capability is now available - meaning that NodePhone2 customers all the way from Aberfoyle to Zamia Creek can now have a telephone number that is local to where they live," he said.

NodePhone customers require a broadband service that runs at speeds of 512 kilobits per second or faster in order to take advantage of the NodePhone service. NodePhone is designed to run on third party broadband services as well as Internode-provided plans.

In other news Internode is reportedly gearing up to provide ADSL2+ with Annex M on its own Naked DSL services later this year. The Annex M upgrade allows for much faster upload speeds taking the typical ADSL2+ upstream rate from about 1Mbps to 2.5Mbit/s. The service is only available on service provided by the company's own DSLAMs as the other service provided by the ISP are wholesaled from Optus which does not have the capability for Annex M speeds.

Customers interested in accessing the faster speed will need to equip themselves with a modem that supports the standard, but many ADSL2+ modems sold in the past year and a half already have the capability.




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