I will need to look into the Google Apps for business part of the voice product. I have not really tried apps accounts yet. As far as APIs go, it looks like most are "unofficial", but there is community support. Check googlevoice.org and also code.google. com/p/pygooglevoice for examples of what can be accomplished today. The Canada part is a showstopper, but it should be fairly easy to use a for exit node in the US to allow you to sign up for a US number. I do know that US users can still call all of Canada for free through the end of this year. My gut feel is that the telcos are what is keeping Google from releasing the product to a broader audience, e.g. more countries than the US. On Oct 9, 2012 3:25 PM, "TJ" <trejrco@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Oct 9, 2012 at 5:47 PM, William Herrin <bill@herrin.us> wrote:
On Tue, Oct 9, 2012 at 5:05 PM, steve pirk [egrep] <steve@pirk.com> wrote:
Have you looked at Google Voice much? I have mine set up to SMS all my devices, including email delivery, and can enable/disable devices as needed. The big benefit, is that I have an inbox full of all my old inbound and outbound text messages.
++1 on Google Voice.
Hi Steve,
Google voice is a fine service and if they sold it with an API, I might well buy it. As a free public service with a strictly unofficial API, I can't seriously consider using it in my product's critical path. I need a service whose provider is actually obligated to keep it working to the standard of resilience typical of the rest of my system.
Let me put it another way: with google voice, google mail, google search you are not the customer. You're the product. I use gmail for my personal mail and I can live with that. For business services, I need to be the customer.
FWLIW - I think that is a bit harsh, even if mostly accurate.
I love GVoice for sending & receiving texts across multiple devices, some of which aren't cellular - or wired - at all :). *(Also have phone calls ring not just my phones, but Skype and GChat as well ...)*
/TJ