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HTTPS Enabled AudioCodes MP202B
VoIP Fax Providers
HTTP Fax Trunking
Corporate Fax Services
FaxCONNECTit
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Frankly, when it comes to VoIP Voice Installations and
VoIP Fax, as a provider you are faced with a few poor choices:
You can offer the VoIP phone service and keep the fax
machine POTS line with the Telco Company, 2 bills for your customer. Not only is
this confusing and inefficient for your customer, it leaves the door open for
the Telco Company to earn the phone business back.
Or, you can install standard VoIP fax and suffer from
reliability problems and constant, frustrating support issues. Eventually you
could lose accounts due to low customer satisfaction due to the many problems
associated with a Fax to T.38 ATA. The time is here to replace a "long haul"
transport protocol for fax with protocols that are designed for the internet,
and ultimately to replace traditional telephony for fax calls. An obvious choice
is to use HTTPS streaming as the replacement for traditional telephony, G.711 or
T.38. It's obvious, simple, and works without changing the operational
characteristics of the process.
FaxSIPit, along with its partners AudioCodes and FaxBack,
have created a next generation VoIP ATA and cloud-based service which support
HTTPS for streaming fax over the internet. These products allow Fax Machines,
Fax Servers, and Fax Services to all replace T.38 with a simpler, secure, and
more reliable HTTPS transport that works over all networks for which
computer-based browsing has acceptable performance.
This technology is in great demand throughout the US and
ever larger demand globally for faxing over network connections for which T.38
was simply not even comtemplated to work on.
Moving the "telephony" component from T.38 to HTTPS allows
virtually anyone to configure and install a fax solution. No certified
networking specialists are required. HTTPS works as well for a single desktop
fax application as with carriers doing thousands of real-time connections at
once. All of the complex technical hurdles have been eliminated, making HTTPS
fax the new standard for today.
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