By

Rafe Needleman /

CBS/ March 27, 2009, 11:04 AM

Call Me At Home

Written by CNET's Rafe Needleman, the Real Technology column appears on CBSNews.com.
Who gives their home phone a second thought these days? Cellular is where it's at: Mobile phones are personal and move with us; they carry our identities. The old, wired "landline" phones tie us down. But while anchored to the past, innovation for the home telephone is not dead. Two giant companies have new and interesting products for consumers that redefine what you can do with a home telephone. One is very smart. One, less so.

Google Voice (CNET review) is the search company's interesting and powerful new telephone service. Based on Grand Central, which Google acquired in 2007, it might make you re-think the utility of your landline home phone.

Google Voice is, essentially, a telephone phone service without its own telephone connections. When you sign up for Google Voice and get a new number for the service (in your own local area code), it lets people call you and leave messages, which you can listen to on your computer, on your personal Google Voice Web page. And once you tell Google Voice where you want to be contacted by voice, it will start automatically routing incoming calls to any phones you want. You can have your Google Voice number redirected to your home phone or your mobile phone or your work phone -- or all at once. You can tell Google Voice that people calling from your group of friends always reach your mobile, or that certain family members never reach you at work. You also get an SMS (text message) inbox for your number. Messages can get forwarded to your mobile phone if you like, and you can reply to them there, or you can see and send messages via your Web-connected computer.

Google Voice will transcribe voicemails left on it (not perfectly, but good enough to get the gist). You can also call out from your Google Voice number by placing a call from your account on the Google Voice Web site -- when you want to make a call, it calls the person you're calling as well as whatever phone you want, and then connects the two of you. (Placing calls from and to U.S. numbers is free; international calls cost money, but the rates are good.)

It also does conference calling and lets you record your phone calls.

While Google Voice is a computer-controlled phone system, it is not, to the user, an Internet or "VOIP" phone. These phones services, offered by companies like Vonage as well as increasingly by broadband providers like Comcast, give the consumer several advantages, including attractive costs and good features, but they rely on the Internet and power connections at you house to work. That means they're not as reliable as a regular landline, and it means the voice quality can vary, from excellent to awful. The Google Voice service, while it's all in the computers at Google, can connect to your existing standard landline phone, removing the variability of home VOIP from the equation.

The service adds to the utility of your old landline (and your office phone as well as your mobile) by making any phone as smart as the Google Voice service overall. If you give people your Google Voice number, they'll be more likely to be able to reach you.

The one big problem with Google Voice is that to use it you have to get a new phone number. That will kill the concept for a lot of people. But on the other hand, it's free, so it's worth experimenting with. Google Voice will be rolling out to the public within the next few weeks.

Everything that Google is doing right with Google Voice -- making a free service that's powerful and flexible -- Verizon is doing wrong with its Verizon Hub (CNET review) home phone service.

The Hub is a phone system designed to replace your home phone. It's a VOIP phone, which means it bypasses the traditional, old reliable phone wires, and it's expensive: The phone itself is $199.99 (after rebate) and service is $34.99 a month and requires a two-year contract. It includes unlimited national calling and texts. Wireless extension handsets are also available.

The product's big advantage is supposed to be the phone's large touchscreen, which gives access to Verizon voicemail services, a calling directory, other phone features, and online content. Certainly when it comes to browsing a contact list and controlling advanced features like do-no-disturb settings and conference calling, it beats the pants off of doing the same things from a typical phone keypad. But some of the features on the phone make you wonder if Verizon is really serious about this product.

For example: This is a home phone that can do SMS. That's great. Text messaging is a very useful way to communicate and it's tragic that landline phones can't do it. But the Hub can only send SMS to and receive messages from other Verizon phones. Any other cellular phone on any network can send SMS to any other phone. So can Google Voice. The Hub's limitation is bizarre and maddening.

Another example: This phone gets traffic reports. That's great, too. The idea is that you put the phone in your family's hub room (usually the kitchen), so that before you head out the door to get in your car to go to work each day, you just punch up the traffic to see which commute route you should take. But although the Hub has a nice big color screen, it does not show you a useful traffic flow map like the one you can get from Google Maps. Rather, it plays you a video/voice recording of the traffic report (so you have to pay attention to make sure you don't miss your route). And it does so after playing you an ad. Listen, Verizon: I don't have time for your ads. And aren't I already paying you $35 a month for this product anyway?

The Hub does let you buy movie tickets, and it displays Verizon's VCast videos. These are cool features. Too bad the 7-inch screen on this broadband-connected quasi-computer doesn't also let you surf the Web.

Verizon is the wrong company to look at if you want to see the future of the home phone. If you really want to get what Verizon is trying, and failing, to offer in your kitchen, get a cheap used laptop, or a netbook, and set it up on your countertop. It will do more than the Hub and give you handy control of your Google Voice account. That's a great way to breathe new life into your home phone.
By Rafe Needleman
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
  • Rafe Needleman On Twitter » On Google+ »

    Rafe reviews mobile apps and products for fun, and picks startups apart when he gets bored. He has evaluated thousands of new companies, most of which have since gone out of business. Feeling lucky? Send pitches to rafe@cnet.com. And watch Rafe's tech issues podcast, Reporters' Roundtable.

5 Comments Add a Comment
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infantabella says:
i just canceled my verizon account after two two-yer contracts. their service price is outrageous for current economic times and other companies are offering more for less. got myself on the NET10 program with a Motorola handset. Nationwide voice calls are 10? a minute and texting only 5?, with no daily, monthly, activation or cancellation fees. roaming is also free. if i'm cutting down on all family expenses, it makes sense to be frugal with a cell phone. the big companies should pay attention. when salaries are being slashed throughout, they can't keep trying to extort the consumer for more and more money
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barbaram99 says:
I use DSL on the computer and talk on the phone as I am online. My folks don't have computer and I don't use cell. I can put the computer to sleep and just go. I am not one for carrying a cell as I don't need it. I feel safety first. I walk and i find it unsafe to walk and yak on a cell. I am a white cane user as that means legally blind. I like the freedom of the old days. I wondered what Google voice is. Would never use it. My friend had want is called voice over and he hated it. He dumped it. It never worked half the time. I told him just use the landline. He can use the phone as I can be online blogging.
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dan400man says:
I will be in line to sign up for Google Voice when it becomes available. But before I jump in whole hog, I will have to see the user agreements and the privacy provisions. This is truly an area that would be ripe for abuse. Recording your phone calls and voice mails, even transcribing voice mails. How private are they? Once you delete them, are they truly deleted? Or do they sit in storage somewhere, ready for hackers to access?
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dan400man says:
Verizon sure knows how to piiss off its customers, me included. You can't use any of the phone manufacturers' own free PC software on Verizon-branded phones, because Verizon wants to sell you their own software and make even more obnoxious profits once they've locked you in. (I've since found free open source BitPim.)

On my previous Nokia phone, I went without PC connectivity for about a year because the Verizon store's sales rep said I had to sign up for the Verizon data package to get it to work. "Isn't there a data cable that will just connect to a USB port on my PC?" "No, I'm afraid not." I failed to notice the forked tongue. I did end up finding a data cable for it.

I'm sure the other wireless providers use the same tactics, but I'm pretty much stuck with Verizon for where I'm at and where I travel to & fro.

This reviewer's comments about Verizon are no surprise to me.
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CnUHerMeNow says:
I'm waiting for Verizon to cry out for a bailout...Waaaaah, our new phone was a flop. There is NO WAY I would ever buy that! What were they thinking? They couldn't have been thinking profit. If, IF the phone was FREE and the service was $9.99 a month AND the ad was taken off the traffic AND, well, nevermind.
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