If I switch my home landline telephone to sonic, Can I keep my long distance carrier Telna.
Thanks
Krishnan
Thanks
Krishnan
No, because Fusion is an all-in-one service which includes both local and nationwide and international long distance. You can of course use a discount international calling card which has a US based access number. For more on the topic, see: http://corp.sonic.net/ceo/2011/02/26/ho ... ing-rates/Krishnan wrote:If I switch my home landline telephone to sonic, Can I keep my long distance carrier Telna.
Thanks
Krishnan
Of course, I don't know your specific calling patterns, but I checked a half dozen international destinations, and in all but one case, Sonic.net's rates were lower than Telna's direct dial rates.Krishnan wrote:If I switch my home landline telephone to sonic, Can I keep my long distance carrier Telna.
Yes, you can use any carrier that offers a call-in access number. Many calling cards do this, for example.Doris wrote:I used to call to HK. Telna's direct dial charges 4.8cents but Sonic.net charges 8 cents.
But I guess I can still call the access number provided by Telna and then connect to international from there, if the rate is lower with Telna. Right?
If you experience voice quality issues, please do report them to support@sonic.net and we will investigate! We may have a bad international path that we are unaware of. In your report, please include the number you called from (your Fusion number, for confirmation), plus the number you called and the date and time of the call. A brief description of the problem (echo, static, volume, etc) would also be useful.QuanSu wrote:Well, this is very good news, but while we wait for free international calls, it would be nice to improve the quality of international calls. Since I switched over from AT&T, quality for international calls from my landline drop 90% compare to what it was before. Calls to Viet Nam is so bad with echoing and static that I have to rise my voice to be heard. (As a test, I called using my AT&T cell phone and it was crystal clear.) Calls to Europe are barely better. What good is free call when I can't even use it?