Voice over internet protocol, also known as voice over IP, or VoIP for short, is a way to facilitate audio calls over an internet connection.
Essentially, the thing that separates VoIP calls from analog phone calls is the routing they implement. Where an analog telephone uses traditional phone lines to connect callers, VoIP calling links two or more endpoints by using the internet.
As for how voice over internet protocol can be used, it’s highly versatile. Anytime you use internet-based voice communications, you’re using VoIP. That includes making voice calls, hosting or joining video meetings, and messaging using voice recordings.
In short, if you’re sending voice signals to one or more people via the internet, you’re using VoIP.
VoIP and IP telephony are very similar, to the point at which they can often be used interchangeably.
We’ve established what VoIP is, so let’s take a look at IP telephony in more detail.
If VoIP is the technology (or protocol) that lets people make calls via the internet, IP telephony is the larger communications system that uses that mechanism. In other words, IP telephony depends on VoIP.
An IP phone system is one that connects to a global IP network or internet service to make calls. It’s a telecommunications system that places calls using VoIP.
That’s why IP telephony and VoIP refer to the same thing: internet telephony.
We already know that VoIP calls are made using the internet. But what does that mean in practical terms?
Let’s start by considering how traditional telephones work.
When you use a traditional phone system to make phone calls, your phone connects to the public switched telephone network or PSTN. That network then transfers your audio input to the person (or people) you’re calling using physical wires so they can hear what you’re saying in real-time.
VoIP phone services work similarly. The major difference is that devices in a VoIP phone system don’t send your data via physical phone lines, but via the internet using VoIP protocol (IP telephony).
In order for audio data to be transmitted in this way, it has to be converted into digital signals first. So, what happens is that you speak into your device the same way you normally would. Your input is then automatically converted into a digital format using VoIP technologies. That data then gets sent to the people on the other end of the line.
To users, VoIP phones work virtually the same as traditional phones.
The biggest difference on the user end is the fact that you can make VoIP calls from many more devices than just your analog phone - but we’ll get into that later.
Essentially, the term “VoIP phone” simply describes any device that can use VoIP to place calls. This includes mobile devices like smartphones, as well as tech-based softphones.
Some phones, particularly softphones, are designed specifically to be used with mobile VoIP. These tend to work best as VoIP phones - and sometimes don’t work as traditional phones at all.