MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJack

MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJack

The makers of MagicJack have, for years now, implored you in late-night infomercials to ditch your telephone company landland and use their product instead. Their device, about the size of a deck of playing cards, connects to a computer on one end and to a regular telephone on the other. With a MackJack thusly installed a user can place any phone call over an internet connection; calls to or within the U.S. are completely free.

(Or course, what MagicJack doesn’t tell you in their infomercials is that theirs isn’t the only internet telephony service. See our comparison of MagicJack, Skype and Vonage. Ooma also has a VoIP product that’s more expensive but otherwise superior to MagicJack’s).

Starting in the spring of 2010 MagicJack will be expanding their competitive sights to the cell phone companies. A new MagicJack device will allow users to use their mobiles to make and receive free calls.

This new MagicJack has received a great deal of press. The AP even ran an article titled MagicJack’s next act: disappearing cell phone fees.

But will the new MagicJack really let you ditch your cell phone company?

internet phone concept mobile phone  MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJack


internet phone concept mobile phone  MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJack
internet phone concept mobile phone  MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJack
internet phone concept mobile phone  MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJack

The answer is, in a word, no.

What the new MagicJack will do is act as a femtocell, a localized base station that links cell phone signals to the internet. Install the MagicJack femtocell, place a call on your cell phone and instead of the signal going to a cellular tower it will go to the MagicJack and your call will be made over a broadband internet connection (for free!).

The major downside of this system should be obvious: A user must be be within range of their operational MagicJack femtocell for it to work. The new MagicJack will not help you make free cell calls while driving, or walking down the street, or waiting for a flight at the airport or annoying a store receptionist while making a purchase or any other situation in which you’d regularly use a cell phone out in the world. And being mobile with your mobile is the whole point, no?

This is not to say that the new MagicJack is useless. There two useful features to it:

First, let’s say you live in a remote area beyond the reach of cell towers. The new MagicJack will provide you with cell phone access. If some one calls your mobile number and you’re at home the call will be routed to you via the internet for free; if you’re away from home and within cell range you’ll receive your call that way.

Second, the new MagicJack will let you cut down on your cell phone minutes by routing the calls you make or receive via the MJ’s femtocell through the internet.

MagicJack will not be the only femtocell option. Most of the world’s major mobile companies, such as AT&T and T-Mobile, are working on their own products. In the U.S.A., Verizon currently has a femtocell product but it’s laughably bad. In Europe, Vodaphone sells a femtocell that works well but is overly expensive.

Comparison to Skype

There is one product currently available that’s very inexpensive and has some of the same benefits that the MagicJack femtocell is expected to: Skype Mobile. Skype has an app (for many, though not all, cell phones models) that allows you to use a cell phone to place an internet call via wi-fi. (The Skype solution is technically not a femtocell since a wi-fi signal is used to transfer your call to the internet and not signals on a mobile phone spectrum).

Our chart below compares Skype Mobile to the expected MagicJack femtocell device. The big advantage of MagicJack: You use it with your current cell phone number; with Skype you either need to get a new number, purchase a Skypephone or use it exclusively for outgoing calls. However, Skype mobile can be used with any wi-fi signal (at your home, airport, coffee shop, etc.) and there’s no hardware to buy or install. Skype mobile also has the slight added advantage of being available now whereas the MagicJack femtocell device is (as of January 2010) still theoretical.

Product Feature MagicJack Femtocell Skype Mobile
  Cost   $40/year ?   $30/year
  Works with computer off   No   Yes
  Works on all cell phones   Yes (theoretically)   No, it has to be a phone for which Skype has an app such as iPhone, Windows and Android phones and well as several Nokia, Samsung, LG, Motorola and Sony Ericsson models. Skype for the Blackberry has been expected any day now for the last 10 months.
  Able to receive incoming calls on your cell number   Yes   No (unless you get a Skypephone mobile)
  Wi-fi required   No   Yes
  Voicemail   Same as your cell phone voicemail (theoretically)   No, Skype has voicemail separate from your cell phone
  International call rates   Moderate   Cheap
  Works with any wi-fi connection   No, only one with the MagicJack femtocell device installed   Yes (provided, of course, you have the password if needed)
      PURCHASE MAGIC JACK PRODUCTS   LEARN MORE ABOUT SKYPE & BUY
Product Feature MagicJack Femtocell Skype

MagicJack still has some legal hurdles to overcome before it becomes available. When it does the MagicJack femtocell device might or might not have some of the same quality, privacy and customer service issues that plague the current incarnation of the MagicJack.

We will, of course, conduct a hands-on review of the MagicJack femtocell once it comes out. Stay updated on that, and all our other tech posts, by following us on Twitter, subscribing to our RSS feed, signing up to receive our posts by email (in the red box at the top right of every SCS Tech page) or simply return to our tech blog often.

published: Jan 2010
internet phone concept mobile phone  MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJack

LEARN MORE & BUY: MagicJack / SKYPEFOLLOW US ON TWITTER |

Related posts:
MagicJack vs. Vonage vs. Skype
Is Ooma Worth Your Moola?
The Best Skype Phones
How To Make Free Phone Calls Via Twitter
Another Preview of the MagicJack Femtocell (external link)

internet phone concept mobile phone  MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJackinternet phone concept mobile phone  MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJack
internet phone concept mobile phone  MagicJack, Meet Cell Phone. Cell Phone, MagicJack


Responses

  1. Maggie G says:

    May 7th, 2010at 10:59 am(#)

    We purchased skype out for our granddaughter who is in university in ohio, one neat feature of the skype out is that you can get skype to go free with your annual contract, however it is only available in the USA and certain European countries not Canada. skype to go is to be used with any cell phone or landline and doesn’t require using your computer. You are give a special skype to go number and can make calls within your area code range the same as using skype on your computer. So she can call anywhere in the US or Canada from her cell phone and the only charges are minutes to her cell phone . No roaming fees and no long distance charges. Now she has informed me she has a skype app on her blackberry so she can use her skype anywhere just like her computer and make calls to the US and Canada using only her minutes. WOW I wish we had those features available in Canada I wouldn’t hesitate for a minute as to which service I would use.

    [Reply to this comment]

  2. MarkKD says:

    February 1st, 2010at 1:47 pm(#)

    You guys are wrong about Skype needing WiFi to work… That’s true on the iPhone since AT&T started whining about their network, but I’ve made calls with Skype on Windows Mobile using 3G on Sprint and T-Mobile many many times. Its a battery hog to leave on if you are expecting an incoming call, but it works. I’ve even used it on a 2G EDGE connection before, and while the quality was sub-par, it still worked. So, WiFi is NOT a necessity.

    [Reply to this comment]

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