Jan 21

The Brussels start-up proposes several options with VoIP call to SIP open protocol, allowing you to call with any SIP compatible VoIP phone with a computer program or a SIP GSM Internet connection, or with a conventional phone connected to Internet via the telephone adapter Nomado Box … Read the full article in french or read it in dutch

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written by nomado \\ tags: , , ,

Sep 03

It has been dubbed ‘The VoIP Revolution’ and ‘Telecom’s biggest threat’ but what is VoIP and how is it going to change the way we make calls?

A new Belgian phone company, Nomado Telecom, were set to become a thorn in the side of many existing mobile networks yesterday when they announced the development of the new iNomado – a software application developed for the Apple iPhone which promises to cut the cost of many users’ phone calls by up to 80%.

Whilst traditional telecom companies hold the monopoly over the networks normally used to place calls on a cell phone, Nomado’s service enables users to place their calls via a WiFi connection, bypassing traditional cellular networks and making huge savings on call charges at the same time. Calls made via Nomado’s cellular VoIP service starts from just 0,025 € per minute to other mobiles (including countries such as the U.S and Hong Kong) and are free between fellow Nomado users. This is VoIP technology in action; the use of a mobile phone’s WiFi internet connection to dodge most of their service provider’s fees, thereby saving a fortune on cell-phone calls. Sales of phones with WiFi capability have been growing steadily over the past few years, (up 327% from 2005 to 2007) allowing companies such as Nomado to step in and offer their services to a greater number of cell-phone users than ever before.

Not only that, but VoIP technology promises to eliminate the international roaming fees that have become the bane of many cell phone users in recent years. When you’re using a VoIP connection, every phone call uses the same network via WiFi, regardless of where you are in the world – in effect, VoIP makes every call a local call. This is ideal for expatriates, globetrotting businesspeople, backpackers who like to keep in touch with home or indeed anyone who simply wants to avoid the exorbitant charges of traditional cell phone operators whose roaming fees typically cost $1.25 (0,85€) per minute.

This is all part of what has become known as “The VoIP revolution”, also known as “telecom’s biggest threat”. VoIP advocates highlight its cost-effectiveness and simplicity as being the two features that may soon allow pioneering companies such as Nomado to field a real challenge to the industry giants. According to cellular-news.com, the statistics reflect this growth: “Research reports that worldwide revenue from hosted VoIP and managed IP PBX services jumped 52% to $24 billion in 2007 after surging 66% in 2006, and is expected to grow in the strong double-digits through at least 2011.”  Nomado Telecom, Europe’s leading provider of Internet telephony services, will begin distribution of their industry-shaking new service “iNomado” from 25th September 2008 via the AppStore, download centre of iPhone applications.

However, VoIP technology isn’t ready to take over just yet. The VoIP providers are unable to offer a static cell phone number to their users. That means that even when you switch to their service, your old cell phone number will remain the same and if your provider charges you for receiving calls over their network, those charges will remain.

Yet, for many, the new cell-phone service offered by pioneering small companies has proven alluring. The service offered by Nomado is already working and popular amongst users of Nokia, Samsung, HTC and other Smartphones. However, according to Olivier Vermeersch, founder of Nomado Telecom, “BlackBerry users who are already using nomado mobility™ are strongly encouraging us to develop an application compatible with RIM Blackberry VoIP services as well, we will also work on it in the near future. In short, there has been a lot of demand for the service.” 

All in all, the popularity of VoIP technology is on the rise and profits in the sector have been forecast to follow. With services such as Nomado’s continually innovating and investing in newer and more effective telecoms solutions such as these, the trend seems set to continue well into the future

written by nomado \\ tags: , ,

Jul 11

iPhone 3G has been lauched today in Belgium and all around the globe..

Of course has the Apple website been out or order today! 

Anyway, what about VoIP over iPhone? Indeed, there is already Fring and Siphon… if you know how to do..

Do we insinuate about a iApp for Nomado…?

More than this, you will see soon!

Be the first to use your VoIP call with you iPhone with iNomado and save hunderds of €

Jobs said that VoIP applications that use cellular-wireless networks will not be allowed, but ones that use Wi-Fi networks will be permitted.

Sign up for an account at Nomado now!

written by nomado \\ tags: , , ,

May 30

Des nouveaux screenshots de iNomado :

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May 18


Worldwide mobile phone sales hit $115.5 billion in 2006, and WiFi phone sales topped $535 million, up 13% and 327% from 2005, respectively, says analyst firm Infonetics Research. As prices continue to drop, demand will continue to grow for both mobile and WiFi VoIP phones in 2007. Worldwide, shipments of mobile handsets jumped 27% between 2005 and 2006, and single- and dual-mode WiFi handsets together jumped 489%.

For the 4-year period between 2007 and 2010, shipments for mobile handsets are forecast to increase 26%, and WiFi handsets are forecast to increase nearly 1300%.

The fastest growing segment in the market by far is the dual-mode WiFi/cellular VoIP phone, with worldwide units shipping at a phenomenal rate: Infonetics forecasts a 5-year compound annual growth rate of 198% between 2006 and 2010.

“Users are demanding single number/single device services, and operators like T-Mobile announced converged services based on Unlicensed Mobile Access (UMA) in 2006,” said Richard Webb, directing analyst for wireless at Infonetics Research. “UMA is a good example of early fixed-mobile convergence (FMC), prior to the eventual shift to IMS in the long-term.”

“More operators are transforming into integrated multimedia service providers, creating converged mobile, wireless LAN, and VoIP solutions that support voice and data services across enterprise, public, and home networks,” Webb added. “The appeal of such converged services is driving WiFi phone adoption, especially in dual-mode WiFi/ cellular handsets.”

Single-mode WiFi-only VoIP handsets are also selling well, mostly in the enterprise space driven by pioneers like SpectraLink, but increasingly in the consumer space as well. Numerous Skype-enabled single-mode phones were launched in 2006 by the likes of D-Link, Linksys, and NETGEAR, and shipments will start to ramp up in 2007.

Mobile Handset Highlights

  • 2G/2.5G GSM handsets made up 49% of worldwide mobile phone revenue in 2006; the remainder was made up by 2G CDMA, W-CDMA, and CDMA2000 handset sales
  • Worldwide mobile subscribers are estimated at 2.5 billion in 2006 (up 26% from 2005), and are forecast to grow 42% to 3.6 billion in 2010
  • 47% of all mobile subscribers come from Asia Pacific, 36% from EMEA, 9% from North America, and 8% from CALA

WiFi Handset Highlights

  • Cisco leads in single-mode WiFi handset revenue market share in 2006, followed by SpectraLink
  • Samsung leads in dual-mode WiFi/cellular handset revenue market share, followed by Nokia
  • In 2006, 71% of WiFi phone revenue was from dual-mode handsets, 29% from single-mode WiFi VoIP handsets
  • North America leads in worldwide revenue for single-mode WiFi phones, and Asia Pacific leads in revenue for dual-mode WiFi/cellular phones
Source : www.cellular-news.com

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