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MAR 27, 2006 09:23:17 AM
This story originally incorrectly reported that
Lycos is owned by Spanish telecommunications company
Telefonica SA. Lycos was purchased by Daum Communications
in 2004, according to the Associated Press.
On Monday, Lycos, the Web portal owned by South
Korea?s Daum Communications, and Austria-based Jajah
launched two separate low-cost voice over Internet
protocol (VoIP) services, intending to make their
marks in the rapidly expanding VoIP space, the Associated
Press reports via the New York Post.
Lycos has launched a Windows-based program that
enables users to place calls free of charge when
they sign up for advertising offers for credit cards
or Netflix DVD rental services, according to the
AP. Any person who chooses not to sign up for promotional
services can pay 1 cent per minute for domestic
calls, and users will receive 100 free minutes,
the AP reports.
Lycos Phone also provides users with movie previews,
computer-to-computer video messaging and text messaging,
according to the AP.
A number of European companies already offer free
VoIP to various countries, including the United
States, but none have provided free U.S. phone numbers
for incoming calls, as the Lycos Phone does, the
AP reports.
The Jajah offering breaks phone calls down into
data packets, like an e-mail message, and when they
reach their recipients, the calls are reassembled
into sound, according to the AP. A trial version
of the Jajah service has been available on the company?s
website since early February, the AP reports.
To place calls with the Jajah product, users need
only visit the company?s site and enter two phone
numbers?the line on which they want to place the
call and the line to which they wish to be connected,
according to the AP. Jajah then calls the user and
once a connection is established, it dials the recipient,
the AP reports.
Jajah?s service requires no special hardware, like
a microphone, and it?s compatible with operating
systems other than Microsoft Windows, according
to the AP.
Customers of Jajah?s service will pay roughly 1.7
cents per minute for domestic calls and roughly
1.9 cents per minute for calls from the United States
to France, the AP reports.
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