PhoneBoy’s Week That Was 4 May 2008
We’ve come to the end of another week of posts. It looks like I’m going to continue to crank out these posts, mostly because the automated methods to do this aren’t as attractive and, quite simply, don’t work that well.
The post list this week:
- Let’s Go Down To The Party Line (From voip.com/blog)
- Scan Your Network For SIP Devices (From voip.com/blog)
- Amazon Web Services Lowers Transfer Prices (From The Web 2.0 Weblog)
- Phones Sound Different Worldwide (From voip.com/blog)
- MRCP and Text-To-Speech (From voip.com/blog)
- iSkoot Updates Symbian Software, Handles Security Incident Well (From The Mobile Technology Weblog, The Wireless Weblog, and The VoIP Weblog)
- Nokia N95 8GB NAM (From The Mobile Technology Weblog)
- Sponsored Post: cellity A Hot App According To GetJar (From The Mobile Technology Weblog)
- GoMadic QuadCharge Univeral Charging Station (From The Mobile Technology Weblog and The Gadgets Weblog)
- VoIP Over The VPN (From voip.com/blog)
- AT&T Offers Unlimited Prepaid Data (From The Mobile Technology Weblog and The Wireless Weblog)
- Ring Voltage Booster II (From The VoIP Weblog and The Gadgets Weblog)
- Sponsored Post: cellity Launches freeSMS Application on Facebook (From The Mobile Technology Weblog)
- How Rotary Phones Affected Area Codes (From voip.com/blog)
- Give Your Mobile Phone That Old Time Feel (From voip.com/blog)
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Related Posts:
- PhoneBoy’s Week That Was 11 May 2008
- PhoneBoy’s Week That Was 28 April 2008
- PhoneBoy’s Week That Was 20 April 2008
- PhoneBoy’s Week That Was 6 April 2008
- PhoneBoy’s Week That Was 30 March 2008




Comment by Aswath
I would have thought that ring-back and busy tones are received from the far-end switch; otherwise isn’t the a possibility of speech being clipped in the event the answer signal message is received later than the media.
This is important because I always get confused with t
Comment by Aswath
… the European ring-back tone to US busy tone.
Comment by PhoneBoy
In a conventional telephony environment, you’re correct. However, SIP devices play all those tones locally.