Tag Archive for 'Google Voice'

Google Voice App Released For Android and BlackBerry

Android Google Voice App

This morning Google took another step toward making mobile operators irrelevant by releasing a  Google Voice application for Android and Blackberry devices.  I’ve been using Google Voice since it launched. If you are unfamiliar with the service, Wikipedia has an excellent overview. In summary,  Google Voice gives you a new (currently U.S. only) local number.  Calls and texts to your Google Voice number are routed by Google Voice to one or more mobile, Gizmo5  VOIP or land-line numbers that you specify.  This is obviously very handy for people like me who have multiple mobile accounts,  including temporary numbers on demo phones. The only number I give out is my Google Voice number, calls and texts to it reach me regardless of which phone I’m carrying. Replying to a text sent though Google Voice works too. The reply-to address is actually a special Google Voice number that routes the message back to the person you are replying to and appears to the recipient to come from your Google Voice number. Google Voice has lots of other features too like visual voicemail and threaded SMS through the web interface, voice mail transcription, call screening and selective blocking of calls from certain numbers like those used by telemarketers.

Making calls with Google Voice is a bit more difficult than receiving them.  There are two ways to do it. You can call your Google Voice Number and go through a couple of prompts to enter the number you are calling. I find using the web or mobile web interface is a little  more convenient.  You visit the Google Voice mobile or desktop website to initiate a call to a  number in your Google Voice contacts. Google Voice calls your phone and then connects that call to the calling party.

Android Google Voice Toggle

There are third party apps for Android, BlackBerry, S60 and Java phones that automate this process.  I’ve been using Evan Charlton’s GV Android app for the last couple of months and find that it works flawlessly if a little slowly.  For calls it has two modes.  One, the “Call Back” option, works as an invisible  front end to the Google Voice website, automatically entering the calling party’s number into the web form to trigger Google Voice to call you back.  The other option, “Call Out“, automates calling Google Voice’s IVR menu and entering your PIN and then the number you are calling.  Direct calling works even without a data plan or when you are roaming with data disabled. Texting with GV automates the mobile web form so  it uses data rather than your texting bundle.

I installed the official Google App on My Google Ion.  It’s very simple to use, the only setting is one that specifies which calls go through  Google Voice and which use the phone’s dialer.  The options are: route all calls or only international calls through Google Voice or to turn Google Voice off and use your own mobile number for  all calls.  This setting can be changed in the app’s settings menu (top image) or using a provided home-screen shortcut, which works like a widget to successively change to each of the three settings when tapped (second image) . To install the shortcut, do a long press on a blank area of the home screen, choose shortcuts and pick “Toggle Google Voice

The Google Voice app on Android is fast! There is only one calling mode, a direct one which looks like it’s using a new API to talk directly to the Google Voice web service. Calls connect almost instantly, much faster than with GV. It even seems quicker than placing calls normally through T-Mobile with the phone dialer.  The Google app requires a connection  to make calls, unlike GV. The connection can be provided by WiFi or by the mobile network.  Both apps  use mobile voice minutes as well, they do not make a VOIP connection even with WiFi active. You can find both the official Google Voice app and GV in the Android Market by searching for “Google Voice”  If you want to see the description and comments on a PC use these Cryket.com links: Google Voice , GV.

Send SMS by Google Voice or GV

Although, slower, GV has a couple of advantages over Google’s  app. For one it works with all Google Voice accounts, the Google app only works if your Google Voice account is tied to the same gmail.com or googlemail.com account that you registered your Google device with.  Plus GV lets you call out without a data plan and lets you choose on a call by call basis whether to use Google Voice or you regular mobile number.

Both GV are completely integrated into the Android Dialer, Contacts and Messaging apps.  Sending texts you get a menu (bottom image), allowing you to select which transport you want use or to define a default for all texts.

I didn’t get a chance to try the BlackBerry app as it appears that BlackBerry OS 4.2 is required and my old 7100i is stuck on 4.1 with no upgrade available. You can download it by visiting m.google.com/voice

So how is Google Voice making operators irrelevant? First by giving you “One number for life” and directing calls to any phone it means users are free to switch calls away from the mobile operator to a land-line or Gizmo VOIP on a Symbian phone.  Secondly, international calls on Google Voice are extremely cheap, as low as $0.02 per minute killing the operators gravy train of overpriced international calls.  I expect that Google will eventually  turn Voice into a full fledged international VOIP calling service using  the Google Talk back-end and by adding support for for non-US Google Voice numbers. At that point the operator will  be only be providing the local voice loop and Google will be your phone company and international long distance provider.

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Google Voice - First Impressions

Google Voice Mobile

I upgraded  my GrandCentral account to Google Voice yesterday.  GrandCentral was the  "one number for life" startup that Google bought two years ago.  After the acquisition, Google seemingly neglected GrandCentral to the point that I expected it would soon follow Jaiku, Google Notes and Dodgeball into the graveyard of deceased Google experiments.

I was wrong. Google seems to have spent those two years redesigning and upgrading GrandCentral to re-release it as Google Voice.  The new service retains all the features of Grand Central;

  • A single  phone number which you can set to ring any or all of up to 6 mobile, landline or Gizmo Project SIP numbers.
  • Free domestic long distance calling
  • Email notifications of voicemails with an attached audio file
  • Call blocking and screening,
  • Custom voicemail greetings and temporary call diversion
  • A Web and Mobile Web administration page where  you can change which phones your GrandCentral number rings, temporarily block calls or divert them to a new number, view call records, listen to voicemail by downloading an mp3 and manage and place calls from your GrandCentral phone book

Google Voice adds some very juicy new features to GrandCentral:

  • Voicemails are automatically transcribed into text which is emailed to you and can be viewed on the web and mobile web
  • Low cost (competive with Skype and other VOIP services) international long distance calling
  • SMS forwarding. Text messages sent to your Google Voice number are forwarded to the mobile numbers you specify.You can send free texts to U.S. numbers from the Google Voice web and mobile  web sites.
  • Make free long distance calls from any phone by calling your Google Voice number, pressing * and choosing "make call" from the menu.

I've been playing with Google Voice for about half a day now and it generally works very well. Texts are delivered immediately and can be viewed as a threaded transcript on the Google Voice web and mobile web sites. Texts sent from the web interfaces appear as coming from your Google Talk numbe Recipients can reply to Google Talk texts and their replies go to all your phones.  When someone sends you a text it comes from a 406-NNN-NNN (Montana) number.  If you reply to that number it will come from your Google Voice number and will show up in your Google Voice inbox.  The sender's real number also appears in the body of the message for reference.

I had mixed results with the voice transcription. It handled common words very well but sometimes stumbles humorously on longer words and proper names. Gustav was transcriped as " the start of" and Yoplait became "at your place". My favorite was "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" which was rendered phonetically as "super caliper she's X P L a delicious". I was generally able to make sense of the transcriptions and the mp3 clip of the actual message was just a click away for the ones I couldn't.

The Google Voice  mobile site is quite similar to the GrandCentral one with three tabs for Inbox, Contacts and Settings.  Inbox now includes SMS and the Settings tab has some new options; "Do Not Disturb",  "Add Credit" and the ability to toggling call screening, which Google calls  "Call Presentation".  It's an easy site to navigate and use and at 4 KB in size it loads quickly and should work on most phones.

When you log into GrandCentral you should soon see an "Upgrade" link if it's not already there.  Upgrading is optional.  If you're a Grand Central user  in the US I recommend upgrading to take advantage of the new features. Canadian GrandCentral users and any other non-US residents who managed to get a  Grand Central number should probably wait as Google Voice is only available in the U.S., at least for now.

GrandCentral did accept users in Canada.   Google has said that Google Voice will be available in Canada and other countries "in the next few weeks."  At least one Canadian user who was able to upgrade to Google Voice says it works except that He can no longer add new Canadian numbers to his phone list and that calls to Canadian numbers, which used to be free, now cost $.01/minute.

Filed in: Wap Review Directory - Mail-IM-Talk-PIM/Talk

Ratings: Content ****_ Usability XXXX_

Ready.mobi Score: 4 "Good"

Mobile Link: www.google.com/voice/m

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