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March 25, 2009 9:00 PM PDT

Jaxtr-on-the-go enables no-Web VoIP calls

by Elinor Mills
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VoIP service Jaxtr is untethering its users from the Internet. The company was set to announce on Wednesday a new Jaxtr-on-the-go service that lets people make calls from their phones without having to visit to Jaxtr's Web site first.

Jaxtr offers 150 toll-free local access numbers around the world for customers to use to make free or low-cost calls as part of the Jaxt-on-the-go service.

(Credit: Jaxtr)

The service is designed for people who aren't near a computer with Internet access or who don't have Web access on their mobile phones.

Basically, users can dial a toll-free local access number from their mobile or landline phone and type in the number they want to call. Then, they can either pay for a low-cost direct call or wait for the service to make the connection after sending an SMS message to the other people and providing them with a local number to dial.

The company has more than 150 toll-free numbers worldwide, mostly for major metropolitan areas. Obviously, you have to go to Jaxtr's Web site initially to get the toll-free number that is nearest you.

From then on, you dial that number to call anywhere and type in the phone numbers you want to call. If you want to make a free call, you wait on the phone while an SMS is sent to the people you are calling that notifies them you are trying to reach them and offers a local number they can use to get connected to you.

Conveniently, the phone number that you both dialed can be used to reach each other thereafter, said Bahman Koohestanti, chief executive of Jaxtr.

The service is an extension of the FreeConnect service Jaxtr announced in December that lets people make free international calls.

For FreeConnect, you have to enter your phone number and the number of the person you want to call on the Jaxtr Web site to initiate the connection, and the other person has to have registered with Jaxtr.

For both services, people can call others directly using calling credits dubbed "Jax." Eventually, people will be able to purchase calling credits by phone, Koohestanti said.

Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service, and the Associated Press. E-mail Elinor.
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by joebob9047 March 26, 2009 2:49 AM PDT
Big deal. Rebtel had the same service for some time now. I have used it for over a year now. There are plenty of other competitors too. Your reporters should be doing better research.
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by icallarlo March 26, 2009 4:51 AM PDT
Wow it's almost like a ..... CALLING CARD lol
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by rdelfin March 27, 2009 7:32 AM PDT
Being from Mexico and by looking at the image there, I'm just learning that the city of "Berlin" is not in Germany, but in Mexico (***?)
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by tparang April 1, 2009 9:58 PM PDT
This is Touraj from jaxtr. Thanks for the coverage and comments everyone.

@icallarlo This service is quite different from your typical "calling card" because it allows for FREE CALLING between over 50 countries.

@rdelfin Thank you for catching this typo (should have been Leon, Mexico). It is now rectified on our site at http://jaxtr.com/user/howitworks.jsp

For more details and information about the service, please see a posting on jaxtr blog at http://jaxtr.blogspot.com/2009/04/over-150-new-ways-to-make-free-calls.html
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