Skype?

Me no speaky...!!Frisky said:Skype?
wnt2bBeast said:sounds like a venerial disease
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juicedpigtails said:
wnt2bBeast said:hi smurfy
ive been well frisky
and how about you?
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wnt2bBeast said:good im glad..
anything new cookin?
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Sassy69 said:I tried it about a year ago -- it has AWESOME sound quality. Doesn't drop & get all flaky like VOIP via AOL or the other IMs. Its all peer-to-peer so the delay is only minimal. But awesome quality.
Frisky said:![]()
you know Suga and I are always up to no good... bwahahah.. evil evil women
tee hee
wnt2bBeast said:yes im aware i have to watch you 2 like a hawk lol
Frisky said:looking out for you dahlin.. workin in the favors.. mmhmm..![]()
Frisky said:Skype?
jnuts said:Good
I'm going to go and watch a movie with my bride, so no luck yapping right now.
If you are still up later, I'll fire up Skype.![]()
wnt2bBeast said:sounds like a venerial disease
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jackangel said:heard of it, never used it, but there's always VOIP or my office cell.
i just returned from the gym and ~40 minutes of weak running (i aspire to be a cardio fag, but i'm not hot enough to qualify as a 'bunny'). damn hiccups.
maybe a talk later if you've run out of other (less interesting) people and i'm stoned enough.
eekkk.. heheh.... 
juicedpigtails said:hey frisky our phone is internet based. we use vonage for the service, the quality is great. it doesnt work as well for faxing but the voice calls are excellent, and cheap


jackangel said:voip = voice over IP. it's internet telephony (e.g., vonage, which juicedpooltacks mentioned)
i don't need to be stoned, but i can only speak in japanese whilst sober.
StickFigure said:No, I don't have Skype but I've had trype, people told me it was good but it was just hype. Ohhh man did I gripe, made me want to beat 'em with a pipe, you know the type. Aahh, the mess, gimme a wipe!
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Frisky said:hmmm you OK bor... having a little SLIM SHADY moment there?
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StickFigure said:lol. Feeling a bit beet-nic blues right now. In other words depressed again.![]()
Trying to be funny but not feeling the love honey. Wish I had a shit load of money......to run. Life feels a bit runny, makes me wish I had someone as fine as you, like a Playboy Bunny. then I'd change my name to G-Money!
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ya too sweet Frisky said:ya too sweet
I'd try to rhyme back ... I can't so cut me some slack....
woohoo damn im good...
Damn Sticky..... Still not good huh hon? You need to talk sugar? Ya know i am here for you darlin.

Frisky said:what is VOIP?![]()
Sassy69 said:Voice over Internet Protocol. In the past the only way to make a call was over POTS (plain old telephone system). Remember the old movie reels of the operators sitting at the switchboard connecting calls? This meant when you were connected to the other person, you "owned' that connection until you hung up.
With VOIP, the idea is that you are using the Internet (or a managed network) where data is sent in "packets" -- the message that is being sent is broken apart, each part is encoded into one of these packets, along with routing information (where it came from, where its going) and also where in the message this piece of information goes once all the packets holding the message arrive at the destination. Then at that end, all the pieces of the message are assembled back into the message and available to be used as a complete piece of data again at the other end. And with all the traffic over the internet, you can't dedicate a direct connection between the sender & the receiver, so instead everyone dumps all their messages in these packets onto the open network and they all get to their own destinations at their own speed.
This was fine in the past because data that was sent over the internet was not time-dependent, i.e. static data like emails, photos, files, whatever. Whenever the complete message arrived and was reassembled, the delivery is complete and the data is available to use on that end. With Voice, however, it does matter how quickly all the pieces of the message arrive at the other end. If you are sending voice over a managed network, that means someone is payign for a dedicated line for their messages to be sent over (e.g. vonage) and there is very little other traffic that have to share the bandwidth. This limits the amount of delay in reassembling the voice message on the other side. If you are going over the open Internet, like w/ the AOL IM voice connection, you've noticed how its spotty, skips, etc. This occurs when all the packets arent assembled in a timely manner in the right order. Also in the case of voice, you have to convert the voice message itself into digital format and then convert back out to hear it. The compression also takes time.
Anyway, the technology is getting much better. I started working w/ this technology in 1997. Its gotten hugely much better!
Sassy69 said:Voice over Internet Protocol. In the past the only way to make a call was over POTS (plain old telephone system). Remember the old movie reels of the operators sitting at the switchboard connecting calls? This meant when you were connected to the other person, you "owned' that connection until you hung up.
With VOIP, the idea is that you are using the Internet (or a managed network) where data is sent in "packets" -- the message that is being sent is broken apart, each part is encoded into one of these packets, along with routing information (where it came from, where its going) and also where in the message this piece of information goes once all the packets holding the message arrive at the destination. Then at that end, all the pieces of the message are assembled back into the message and available to be used as a complete piece of data again at the other end. And with all the traffic over the internet, you can't dedicate a direct connection between the sender & the receiver, so instead everyone dumps all their messages in these packets onto the open network and they all get to their own destinations at their own speed.
This was fine in the past because data that was sent over the internet was not time-dependent, i.e. static data like emails, photos, files, whatever. Whenever the complete message arrived and was reassembled, the delivery is complete and the data is available to use on that end. With Voice, however, it does matter how quickly all the pieces of the message arrive at the other end. If you are sending voice over a managed network, that means someone is payign for a dedicated line for their messages to be sent over (e.g. vonage) and there is very little other traffic that have to share the bandwidth. This limits the amount of delay in reassembling the voice message on the other side. If you are going over the open Internet, like w/ the AOL IM voice connection, you've noticed how its spotty, skips, etc. This occurs when all the packets arent assembled in a timely manner in the right order. Also in the case of voice, you have to convert the voice message itself into digital format and then convert back out to hear it. The compression also takes time.
Anyway, the technology is getting much better. I started working w/ this technology in 1997. Its gotten hugely much better!
ola?Frisky said:DUDE![]()
jackangel said:ok i am stoning now.
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Frisky said:So ya can talk english eh?
Frisky said:i'm gonna guess that is a YAY......![]()
Frisky said:Great!
Enjoy the movie and the cuddling with Mrs jnuts and check in later and we shall chat![]()
jackangel said:who me?![]()
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