Necroing an old thread, but in case anyone's tried in the past two weeks ....
Verizon admitted fault when I called support off the bat! (why didn't they fix it sooner....???) Been offline due to a failed CO connection. Oh well. Getting fixed now! On Mon, Feb 9, 2015 at 7:24 PM, Sean Caron <sca...@umich.edu> wrote: > That can help and probably plays more a factor in professional deployments > but for the hobbyist using the common broadband transports (cable, xDSL, > ...) I find it mostly comes down to just getting the quickest connection > you can reasonably afford and cranking up the jitter buffer :O > > Just using G.711 u-law (I haven't really played with other codecs to say > whether that could be a factor) end-to-end I've been able to achieve 28.8 > kbps+ connects over VoIP with 50/10 Comast "business" as the transport on > my side. > > Best, > > Sean > > > > > On Mon, Feb 9, 2015 at 12:18 PM, Mike Whalen <mi...@thecomputervalet.com> > wrote: > > > On February 9, 2015 at 11:16:30 AM, Sean Caron (sca...@umich.edu) wrote: > > > > It's all about latency and jitter. If you can keep the latency and jitter > > down... and consistent... modems will actually work pretty well over VoIP > > and you can sometimes pull off some fairly high data rates... If jitter > on > > the link is very bad, good luck, even at 300 baud. > > > > Is this something usually made better by setting up QoS or traffic > shaping? > > > > > > > > Cheers, > > > > m > > > -- Gary G. Sparkes Jr. KB3HAG