I've recently ported my voice line from AT&T to Sonic and was wondering about people's experiences with voice latency on Fusion. I'm curious what (if any) targets Sonic may have, or if it's a case of delivering luck of the draw and hoping nobody complains.
I have at home my land line, an OOMA, a Verizon and a Republic Wireless (Sprint) phone, and also a Google Voice number connected to the RW phone. Calls between Verizon and the AT&T land-line were my gold standard, with a one-way latency under 130ms. Other calls between the other pairs of phones are typically at least 230-270ms with another ~130ms penalty any time forwarding through Google Voice is involved.
The land line is of course PSTN/POTS, and my Verizon service seems closely tied into that, while the other numbers are all IP based in one way or another.
I wasn't expecting this when switching to Sonic, but my best-case latency between it and the other phones is now ~230ms. It's basically as though the voice side of Fusion is behaving in line with the other VOIP lines rather than like my old land line.
I have at home my land line, an OOMA, a Verizon and a Republic Wireless (Sprint) phone, and also a Google Voice number connected to the RW phone. Calls between Verizon and the AT&T land-line were my gold standard, with a one-way latency under 130ms. Other calls between the other pairs of phones are typically at least 230-270ms with another ~130ms penalty any time forwarding through Google Voice is involved.
The land line is of course PSTN/POTS, and my Verizon service seems closely tied into that, while the other numbers are all IP based in one way or another.
I wasn't expecting this when switching to Sonic, but my best-case latency between it and the other phones is now ~230ms. It's basically as though the voice side of Fusion is behaving in line with the other VOIP lines rather than like my old land line.