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MagicJack Can Make Cell Phone Fees Disappear

PETER SVENSSON   01/ 8/10 02:29 PM ET   AP

Magicjack

LAS VEGAS — The company behind the magicJack, the cheap Internet phone gadget that's been heavily promoted on TV, has made a new version of the device that allows free calls from cell phones in the home, in a fashion that's sure to draw protest from cellular carriers.

The new magicJack uses, without permission, radio frequencies for which cellular carriers have paid billions of dollars for exclusive licenses.

YMax Corp., which is based in Palm Beach, Fla., said this week at the International Consumers Electronics Show that it plans to start selling the device in about four months for $40, the same price as the original magicJack. As before, it will provide free calls to the U.S. and Canada for one year.

The device is, in essence, a very small cellular tower for the home.

The size of a deck of cards, it plugs into a PC, which needs a broadband Internet connection. The device then detects when a compatible cell phone comes within 8 feet, and places a call to it. The user enters a short code on the phone. The phone is then linked to the magicJack, and as long as it's within range (YMax said it will cover a 3,000-square-foot home) magicJack routes the call itself, over the Internet, rather than going through the carrier's cellular tower. No minutes are subtracted from the user's account with the carrier. Any extra fees for international calls are subtracted from the user's account with magicJack, not the carrier.

According to YMax CEO Dan Borislow, the device will connect to any phone that uses the GSM standard, which in the U.S. includes phones from AT&T Inc. and T-Mobile USA. At a demonstration at CES, a visitor's phone with a T-Mobile account successfully placed and received calls through the magicJack. Most phones from Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel Corp. won't connect to the device.

Borislow said the device is legal because wireless spectrum licenses don't extend into the home.

AT&T, T-Mobile and the Federal Communications Commission had no immediate comment on whether they believe the device is legal, but said they were looking into the issue. CTIA – The Wireless Association, a trade group, said it was declining comment for now. None of them had heard of YMax's plans.

Borislow said YMax has sold 5 million magicJacks for landline phones in the last two years, and that roughly 3 million are in active use. That would give YMax a bigger customer base than Internet phone pioneer Vonage Holdings Corp., which has been selling service for $25 per month for the better part of a decade. Privately held YMax had revenue of $110 million last year, it says.

U.S. carriers have been selling and experimenting with devices that act similarly to the wireless magicJack. They're called "femtocells." Like the magicJack, they use the carrier's licensed spectrum to connect to a phone, then route the calls over a home broadband connection. They improve coverage inside the home and offload capacity from the carrier's towers.

But femtocells are complex products, because they're designed to mesh with the carrier's external network. They cost the carriers more than $200, though some sell them cheaper, recouping the cost through added service fees. YMax's magicJack is a much smaller, simpler design.

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03:28 PM on 01/12/2010
Oh AT&T I hope you're hearing this one. "Femtocells now offer cell phone service for $1.70 a month with MagicJack! That's just $19.95 a year. $19.95 a year! " lol, What can you saw now with MJ's new femtocells? More MagicJack Details: http://bit.ly/magic-jack-femto-cells-detail
10:05 AM on 01/12/2010
I'm sold ! i'm gonna get one
09:29 PM on 01/11/2010
vote YES for unlicensed spectrum & support your local sheriff.
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patrickmcdougal
05:02 PM on 01/11/2010
metro pcs unlimited everything $35 a month
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normanx
06:55 AM on 01/11/2010
T-Mobile already offers unlimited calls for forty bucks a month... so not much advantage there.. unless you call canada a lot. Where it will be most helpful is when you live in a place that doesn't have great cell reception for your GSM carrier... or you are stupid enough to still be subscribed to AT&T...
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11:23 AM on 01/11/2010
Also, there's skype. which is 30-40 a year for unlimited calls via your cell phone (using a number specific to your call zone that you select through skype). And you have skype to skype. And then T Mobile is great. I get unlimited texts and calls for 60/month.
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11:34 PM on 01/10/2010
VoIP is the future. F--- the cell phone carriers!
05:47 PM on 01/10/2010
So I buy a more expensive magic jack so I can talk for free on my cell phone at home, or I could buy the cheaper magic jack and use a cheap cordless phone instead?

Maybe it is me, but I don't get it. It only works at home, so why not use the regular magic jack with a cordless phone?
08:24 AM on 01/11/2010
No necessarily. I will work anywhere you can get an internet signal. There are companies that already set up mobile internet all over cities. Seattle comes to mind and I know that Clear is doing it in Dallas Ft Worth where for a monthly subscription you can get mobile internet on the go. So it stands that you can use this device even on the go because as the article describes it, it acts like a cell tower.
03:01 PM on 01/10/2010
Caveat Emptor: MagicJack blocks calls to outside conference lines. Your call will be redirected to their recording to use their conferencing product. If you're not originating the call, you are s.o.l.
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MSMSucksCom
Sadly, my bio fits in this space.
03:34 AM on 01/10/2010
This is the same as T-Mobile's HotSpotAtHome or something like that. I think this magic jack would work the same way.

You need two things I believe, a phone with WiFi (that sends out a signal to the Magic Jack device). You need that because otherwise you have just a plain old cell phone. Obviously a cell phone signal can't access this, if it did you would be using your plan minutes.

The Magic Jack, just like T-Mo's service, uses a cable modem (broad band) to create a mini cell phone tower in your house. So that's a second thing you need, cable ISP service.

What this is basically doing is allowing you to use your cell phone as a handset in the house. For example, if you use Skype you need a handset to use it off your computer.

This device creates the tower and lets you use the cell phone just as if you would use a land line. But when making calls you are using the magic jack as a form of voip (Internet phone calls).

A feature of T-Mobile's HotSpot was that you could go to any of 11,000 places where it had the HotSpot service (airports, Starbucks) and the phone would automatically switch to making an Internet call as long as one was withing the WiFi signal.

By the way, HotSpot was a flop because of the advent of cheap minute plans.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
08:16 PM on 01/10/2010
You've missed it completely. Try reading the article. If you have trouble with it, I recommend checking with wikipedia for the definitions of the technical terms.
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archeDeWashington
04:35 PM on 01/09/2010
wow the world is becoming sophisticated. I will just ask don't destroy my people for the sake of technology.

www.okongo.org

share the above link to all.

Until when, will I stop asking you to save my people? Until you stand up for my people then...

Thanks
07:57 PM on 01/08/2010
Magicjack phones home with ALL sorts of info from the inside of your computer.

Vonage has something that does the same thing. And I trust it way way more even though I have to pay per month. And I hear it works on iPod Touch as well, but cannot confirm.
07:51 PM on 01/08/2010
this sounds awesome, i hope they make one that works with macs!
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Computer Geek
Logician Atheist Lefty
05:15 PM on 01/08/2010
Let the buyer beware - do some research on this company and you will see TONS of complaints - try getting in touch with someone at this company first (this was the biggest complaint by far). Unless things have changed significantly in the last year...
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Rosewren
The power of kindness is infinite
09:24 PM on 01/08/2010
I bought a Magic Jack last year but it wouldn't work probably because of my firewall. There was no one to talk to to resolve the problem so sent it back and did get a prompt refund.
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04:45 PM on 01/08/2010
Boom. I was just thinking about this the other night. Now I get to buy one. Why doesn't this ever work when I think of Christina Ricci or Shilpa Shetty?
03:53 PM on 01/08/2010
Nice. Now let's see one that's compatible with Sprint and Verizon.
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amdezurik
01:53 AM on 01/10/2010
doubtful for a while, they have the terrible service