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By WALTER S. MOSSBERG.
When I see a high-tech product that's advertised mainly via
frequent hard-sell TV ads, as if it were a diet pill, I tend to
assume it can't be very good, especially if its price is
absurdly low. So, I haven't paid much attention to a product
called magicJack, a small $40 adapter for your computer that
claims to let you make unlimited domestic phone calls over the
Internet with your home telephone free for a whole year-and for
just $20 a year thereafter.
But after receiving reader requests to review magicJack, I
decided to do so. To my surprise, it worked pretty much as
advertised. It has a few drawbacks, and extra fees for added
services, such as vanity phone numbers. But I found magicJack
easy to set up and easy to use, and it yielded decent, if not
pristine, call quality. I even tested customer support-a source
of complaints online-and found it friendly, fast and responsive.
Magic Jack is a new device and service that allows you
to make cheap phone calls through your computer. Overall,
the product works as advertised, Walt Mossberg found.
MagicJack looks like an oversized USB flash drive. On one end is
a standard USB connector for the PC; on the other is a standard
phone jack to plug in a phone. It's compatible with PCs running
Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7, as well as with all Intel-based
Macs. It works with both corded and cordless phones, and comes
with software for dialing, though you can also dial directly
from a connected phone.
The low annual fee covers calls to and from any phone on any
telephone network-landline or cellphone-not just phones
connected to computers or to other magicJacks. The only
restriction is that the numbers called must be in the U.S.,
Canada, Puerto Rico or the U.S. Virgin Islands. You can also buy
low-cost prepaid international minutes, or take your magicJack
abroad to make free calls home. You can move it among different
computers and locations.
MagicJack can also be used without a phone handset, via a
computer headset or the computer's built-in microphone and
speakers.
There's nothing new about Internet phone calling. Companies like
Vonage and Skype have been doing it for years. But magicJack is
different. It emphasizes calling to and from phones on regular
wired and wireless phone networks, and its prices for calls to
and from such non-Internet-connected phones are much lower.
For instance, the lowest plan advertised on Vonage's Web site
for calling regular phones in the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico
is $17.99 a month, or about $216 a year, versus magicJack's $20.
And Vonage gives you only 500 minutes a month, while magicJack
sets no limit. Skype charges per-minute or monthly fees for
calls to regular phones and an added fee to receive incoming
calls.
The maker of magicJack says its low prices are possible because
the product is produced by a privately held Florida company
called YMAX, which is also a phone carrier. The company also
runs ads inside its software. You can buy the device at a wide
variety of stores, even drugstores and convenience stores.
I tested magicJack on both a PC and a Mac. The software resides
inside the magicJack itself and installs each time you connect
it.
In my tests, I made and received calls on both computers, using
a single landline phone and using a cordless-phone system in my
house after plugging its base station into the magicJack. In the
latter case, I could make and receive calls from cordless phones
all over my house. I exchanged calls with both landline phones
and cellphones from the magicJack.
The call quality was good, except for a few times when the
connection got scratchy for a second or two. Most of the people
I called said they couldn't tell I wasn't on a regular call. The
system offers voice mail, call forwarding and conference calls,
and you can save contacts.
A couple of times I didn't get an immediate dial tone, and had
to hang up and try again.
The biggest downside of the magicJack compared with regular
phone service is that you have to be running an Internet-connected
computer, with a magicJack installed anytime you want to make or
receive calls. Also, as with all Internet phone systems, you
have to register your address with 911 emergency systems.
With magicJack, you get a new phone number. The company says it
is working on allowing you to port your existing landline number.
You can keep your landline number for use on some phones or when
you're not using magicJack.
I found magicJack worked better on Windows than on the Mac. At
one point, magicJack customer support had to send me software to
patch the Mac version. But the company claims it is fixing that
with a new Mac version coming soon.
YMAX also says it plans to roll out this year a Skype-like
service that won't require any magicJack hardware, just a PC or
an iPhone. It also plans a new version of magicJack to turn
cellphones into wireless magicJack handsets.
I don't know if those diet pills in the TV ads work. But
magicJack does.
-Find all of Walt Mossberg's columns and videos online, free, at the
All Things Digital Web site,walt.allthingsd.com.
Email him at mossberg@wsj.com.
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